Albert Einstein was a German-born theoretical physicist. He is widely seen as the most influential scientist of the twentieth century. He was born on 14 March 1879 in Ulm, in southern Germany. His family was secular Jewish and middle class. His father ran an electrochemical business that often struggled. His mother was a musician who pushed Albert to play the violin from age five. He had one younger sister, Maja. As a child, he was shy and slow to speak, but fascinated by science. A compass given to him at age five made him wonder about invisible forces. He found regular school dull. At sixteen he ran away from his German school. He finished his education in Switzerland and entered the Swiss Federal Polytechnic School in Zurich in 1896. He graduated in 1900. He could not find a teaching post and took a job at the Swiss Patent Office in Bern. There, in his spare time, he produced his most famous work. In 1905, his 'miracle year', he published four papers that changed physics: on the photoelectric effect, Brownian motion, special relativity, and the equation E=mc². Fame followed slowly. He held professorships in Zurich, Prague, and Berlin. In 1915 he completed the general theory of relativity. He won the Nobel Prize in Physics for 1921. In 1933, the Nazis came to power. Einstein, who was Jewish, was already in the United States and never returned to Germany. He took a position at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, where he worked until his death on 18 April 1955, aged 76.
Einstein matters for three reasons. First, he changed how we understand space, time, and gravity. His special theory of relativity (1905) showed that time and space are not the fixed background of the universe; they depend on the observer's motion. His general theory of relativity (1915) explained gravity as a curving of space and time around heavy objects. These ideas sound abstract but are tested every day. Modern GPS, which guides phones and cars, only works because engineers correct for the small effects of relativity. Black holes, gravitational waves, and the Big Bang all come out of his framework.
Second, his equation E=mc² connected mass and energy. Tiny amounts of mass, the equation said, could be turned into huge amounts of energy. Forty years later, this equation lay behind the development of nuclear power and nuclear weapons. Einstein himself was a pacifist who feared this. He signed a 1939 letter warning that Nazi Germany might build an atomic bomb. The United States built one first. Einstein later said that if he had known the Germans would fail, he would have done nothing.
Third, he became a global symbol of science and conscience. His face is on T-shirts and posters everywhere. The popular image is harmless and often empty. The real Einstein was more interesting. He was an active pacifist, a Zionist who criticised Israeli policies, an early member of the American NAACP who called racism 'a disease', and a man with a complicated personal life. He showed that a great scientist could also be a public conscience.
For a first introduction, Walter Isaacson's biography Einstein: His Life and Universe (2007) is detailed, readable, and balanced. The 1970 essay collection Out of My Later Years gathers Einstein's accessible essays in his own voice. The Nobel Prize website has clear short biographies and his original lectures. For young readers, Don Brown's illustrated Odd Boy Out: Young Albert Einstein is excellent. The PBS documentary Einstein's Big Idea (2005) gives a strong visual introduction to E=mc² and its history.
For deeper reading, Einstein's own short book Relativity: The Special and the General Theory (1916) is surprisingly accessible. Brian Greene's The Elegant Universe places relativity in modern theoretical physics.
The Science and Life of Albert Einstein (1982) is the standard scientific biography.
A Biography is comprehensive on personal life. For Einstein's letters, the multi-volume Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, published by Princeton, is the major scholarly resource.
Einstein failed maths at school.
He did not. This is one of the most famous false stories in popular culture. Einstein excelled at maths from an early age. By twelve he was studying calculus on his own. He did struggle with rote learning at school and clashed with strict German teachers, but he was always strong in mathematics. The 'failed maths' myth probably grew because his school grading scale changed in his youth (a 6 went from worst to best), making old reports look worse than they were. The myth is sometimes used to comfort students who struggle. The truth is more useful: Einstein worked hard at mathematics his whole life, and his great breakthroughs depended on serious mathematical skill, often borrowed from his friend Marcel Grossmann.
Einstein invented the atomic bomb.
He did not. He never worked on the Manhattan Project. The FBI denied him a security clearance because of his pacifist politics. He did sign a 1939 letter to President Roosevelt urging the United States to research nuclear weapons before Nazi Germany did. His equation E=mc² describes the relationship between mass and energy that is at work in any nuclear reaction. But the actual bomb was built by other physicists, including J. Robert Oppenheimer's team. Einstein learned about Hiroshima from the radio. He spent the rest of his life campaigning against nuclear weapons.
Einstein won the Nobel Prize for relativity.
He did not. He won the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics for his explanation of the photoelectric effect, the work that helped found quantum theory. Relativity was still considered controversial in some scientific circles in the early 1920s. The Nobel committee chose a less debated achievement. This is a useful reminder that even the world's most famous prizes do not always recognise a thinker's most important work. Einstein's lasting fame rests mostly on relativity, which the Nobel did not directly award.
Einstein was politically neutral or apolitical.
He was deeply political. He was a lifelong pacifist who refused military service as a young man. He was an active Zionist who helped found Hebrew University but criticised some Israeli policies. He was a member of the NAACP and corresponded with W. E. B. Du Bois on civil rights. He campaigned for nuclear disarmament. He was a socialist sympathiser who once wrote an essay called 'Why Socialism?'. The FBI kept a 1,400-page file on him. The myth of the apolitical scientist genius does not fit Einstein. Many of his most famous public statements were political.
For research-level engagement, Albert Einstein's own 'Autobiographical Notes' in Paul Schilpp's Albert Einstein: Philosopher-Scientist (1949) is essential. Don Howard and John Stachel's Einstein: The Formative Years gathers important historical and philosophical work. Kip Thorne's Black Holes and Time Warps explores Einstein's theory through to modern astrophysics. For the ethical legacy, Robert Jungk's Brighter Than a Thousand Suns and Richard Rhodes's The Making of the Atomic Bomb are standard. The Albert Einstein Archives at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem hold his papers and are increasingly available online.
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