THE name
"Einstein" evokes images of a good-humoured genius, who revolutionised our
concepts of space, time, energy, mass and motion. Time named Albert Einstein
"person of the century". The language itself has incorporated "Einstein" into
our common vocabulary as a synonym for extraordinary brilliance. Many consider
Einstein to have been the finest mind in recorded human history.
That is the popular image, fostered by
textbooks, the media, and hero worshiping physicists and historians. However,
when one reads the scientific literature written by Einstein's contemporaries, a
quite different picture emerges: one of an irrational plagiarist, who
manipulated credit for their work.
Einstein is perhaps most famous for the
special theory of relativity, published in 1905 in the German physics journal,
Annalen der Physik. The paper was devoid of references, a fact that Einstein's
friend and Nobel prize winner for physics, Max Born, found troubling.
"The striking point is that it contains
not a single reference to previous literature," Born stated in 1955, before the
International Relativity Conference in Bern. "It gives you the impression of
quite a new venture. But that is, of course, as I have tried to explain, not
true."
Though Einstein's 1905 article contained
no references, it was so strikingly similar to a paper written by Hendrik
Lorentz the previous year, that Walter Kaufmann and Max Planck felt a need to
publicly point out that Einstein had merely provided a metaphysical
reinterpretation and generalisation of Lorentz' scientific theory, a
metaphysical reinterpretation and generalisation Henri Poincare had already
published.
As Charles Nordmann, astronomer to the
Paris Observatory, pointed out: "It is really to Henri Poincare, the great
Frenchman whose death has left a void that will never be filled, that we must
accord the merit of having first proved, with the greatest lucidity and the most
prudent audacity, that time and space, as we know them, can only be relative. A
few quotations from his works will not be out of place. They will show that the
credit for most of the things which are currently attributed to Einstein is, in
reality, due to Poincare."
Einstein acknowledged the fact, but
justified his plagiarism in a cavalier fashion in Annalen der Physik in 1907.
"It appears to me that it is the nature of the business that what follows has
already been partly solved by other authors. Despite that fact, since the issues
of concern are here addressed from a new point of view, I believe I am entitled
to leave out a thoroughly pedantic survey of the literature, all the more so
because it is hoped that these gaps will yet be filled by other authors, as has
already happened with my first work on the principle of relativity through the
commendable efforts of Mr. Planck and Mr. Kaufmann."
The completed field equations of the
general theory of relativity were first deduced by David Hilbert, a fact
Einstein was forced to acknowledge in 1916, after he had plagiarised them from
Hilbert in late 1915. Paul Gerber solved the problem of the perihelion of
Mercury in 1898. Physicist Ernst Gehrcke gave a lecture on the theory of
relativity in the Berlin Philharmonic on August 24, 1920, and publicly
confronted Einstein, who was in attendance, with Einstein's plagiarism of
Lorentz' mathematical formalisms of the special theory of relativity, Palagyi's
space-time concepts, Varicak's non-Euclidean geometry and of the plagiarism of
the mathematical solution of the problem of the perihelion of Mercury first
arrived at by Gerber. Gehrcke addressed Einstein to his face and told the crowd
that the emperor had no clothes.
This was Einstein's response published
in the Berliner Tageblatt und Handels-Zeitung on August 27, 1920, translated
into English in the book Albert Einstein's Theory of General Relativity edited
by Gerald E. Tauber: ". . . Gerber, who has given the correct formula for the
perihelion motion of Mercury before I did. The experts are not only in agreement
that Gerber's derivation is wrong through and through, but the formula cannot be
obtained as a consequence of the main assumption made by Gerber. Mr Gerber's
work is therefore completely useless, an unsuccessful and erroneous theoretical
attempt.
"I maintain that the theory of general
relativity has provided the first real explanation of the perihelion motion of
mercury. I have not mentioned the work by Gerber originally, because I did not
know it when I wrote my work on the perihelion motion of Mercury; even if I had
been aware of it, I would not have had any reason to mention it."
The fact that Einstein was a plagiarist
is common knowledge in the physics community. What isn't so well-known is that
the sources Einstein parroted were also largely unoriginal. In 1919, writing in
the Philosophical Magazine Harry Bateman, a British mathematician and physicist
who had emigrated to the United States, unsuccessfully sought acknowledgment of
his work.
"The appearance of Dr Silberstein's
recent article on General Relativity without the Equivalence Hypothesis
encourages me to restate my own views on the subject," Bateman wrote.
"I am perhaps entitled to do this as my
work on the subject of general relativity was published before that of Einstein
and Kottler, and appears to have been overlooked by recent writers."
My book is a documentation of Einstein's
plagiarism of the theory of relativity. It discloses his method for manipulating
credit for the work of his contemporaries, reprints the prior works he parroted,
and demonstrates that he could not have drawn his conclusions without prior
knowledge of the works he copied but failed to reference.
Numerous republished quotations from
Einstein's contemporaries prove that they were aware of his plagiarism.
Side-by-side comparisons of Einstein's words juxtaposed to those of his
predecessors prove the almost verbatim repetition. There is even substantial
evidence presented in the book that Einstein plagiarised the work of his first
wife, Mileva Maric, who had plagiarised others.
Mr Bjerknes, an American historian of
science, has authored six books on Einstein and the theory of relativity. Albert
Einstein: The Incorrigible Plagiarist (ISBN 0971962987) is available at
www.amazon.com .
Excerpts at:
www.xtxinc.com