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The Einstein Theory Of Relativity (2004)

by Hendrik Antoon Lorentz(Favorite Author)
3.72 of 5 Votes: 2
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English
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Public Domain Books
review 1: The Theory of Relativity developed by Einstein was the most astounding achievement in science since the Newton's theory of Gravitation. The book marks that out in brief scientific terms.The book is written 15 year after its development. The author goes through the approach that Einstein took to formulate his remarkable theory and how astronomical phenomenon have demonstrated it to a level of acceptance in the scientific community.The book contains the observations that the theory supports and those that it does not.
review 2: It's hard to complain about this book because: a.) it's a free kindle book, b.) the author was brilliant, a Nobel Laureate, and a man whose work contributed to the discoveries of Einstein, and c.) it's a very short book, clocking in at abo
... moreut 60 pages, and so it's not a huge time investment--though for most it will be a bigger time investment than its page count would suggest. All that being said, I'll be upfront and tell you that his work is the product of a different era and doesn't establish its audience clearly. Science writing, particularly on subjects as arcane as relativity, is a challenge. One has to pick an audience and carefully write for that audience. If ones audience is broad (i.e. not well-trained in science), this means one has to accept a lot less precision in exchange for clarity. In other words, one has to write like Brian Greene or Michio Kaku do in their popular works. On the other hand, if you want to write for technical people, you should probably feel free to show your math and sling the technical jargon. This book tries to walk a middle ground. It doesn't lay the subject out in clear, simple, and entertaining analogies. (With the exception of a moving car analogy early on that gets bogged down.) However, there're no equations or highly technical and jargon-suffused discussions. (Though the section on deflection of light does get into measurements and is bit technical.)So the question the reader needs to ask themselves--provided they haven't had physics since high school or their freshman year of college--is whether they are willing and able to grind through reading that will require them to think hard the whole way. One doesn't need a big science vocabulary, and you aren't asked to ponder any equations, but you do have to noodle out what the author is saying to get value out of the reading. As I implied earlier, this book (pamphlet) took me considerably longer to read than 60 pages normally would--and I read a fair amount of popular science works. Of course, given that it's free, it's worth a try if you have a Kindle. If you don't like it you can always buy a Greene or Kaku book to explain the subject in a more palatable fashion. less
Reviews (see all)
Sahithya
Not a great science nerd, so I love how easy it was to understand this book!
brookie
This was so far over my head but an interesting, quick read.
Mae
Still not simple enough for laypeople to understand easily.
Callen
Just over my head, ended up just skimming this one.
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