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8 EINSTEIN’S UNIVERSEAS
universe t didn’t need it.

    Ps as a rule are not overattentive to ts of Sent officeclerks, and so, despite tidings, Einstein’s papers attracted little notice.

    solved several of t mysteries of tein applied for a jobas a university lecturer and ed, and teacedt back to  of course t even come close to finis.

    Paul Valéry once asked Einstein if  a notebook to record ein looked at  genuine surprise. “O’s not necessary,” he replied.

    “It’s so seldom I  out t  tended to begood. Einstein’s next idea est t anyone est, according to Boorse, Motz, and eaver in tful ory of atomic science.

    4o be t is sometery, but David Bodanis suggests itprobably came from tin celeritas, meaning sness. t volume of tionary, compiled a decade before Einsteins to cricket, but makes no mention of it as a symbol for ligness.

    “As tion of a single mind,” te, “it is undoubtedly t intellectualac of y,” .

    In 1907, or so it imes been ten, Albert Einstein sao t gravity. Alas, like many good stories to beapocrypo Einstein ting in a cy occurred to him.

    Actually, o Einstein ion toty, since it  to set t one ty.   t itdealt ially unimpeded state. But acle sucy? It ion t of t decade and lead to tion in early1917 of a paper entitled “Cosmological Considerations on tivity.”

    tivity of 1905 ant piece of  as C. P. Snoein  t of it ing to  toget it,” e Sno is likely t ing for today.”

    itrified ein oo splendida figure to remain permanently obscure, and in 1919, t at
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