Did Einstein steal his ideas from the patent office?
When Einstein was a patent agent, most of the inventions were either mechanical or electromechanical. Einstein’s papers were purely academic with presumably little applicability to “machines” or apparatuses. So, no. Einstein did not steal any ideas.
Did Einstein steal ideas from other people?
Einstein was an inept and moronic person, who could not even tie his own shoelaces; he contributed NOTHING ORIGINAL to the field of quantum mechanics, nor any other science. On the contrary—he stole the ideas of others, and the Jew-controlled media made him a ‘hero.
Did Albert Einstein steal his theory of relativity from his first wife?
Did Albert Einstein steal the Theory of Relativity from his wife? That’s a bold claim, but some scholars believe that the true genius behind Einstein’s theories of light, space, and time may have been his first wife.
Was Albert Einstein’s wife a collaborator with him?
Of course, traditional Einstein scholars quickly dismiss this claim, calling it “pure fantasy.” “She may have been a sounding board for his ideas, but she was not a collaborator,” John Stachel, director of the Center for Einstein Studies at Boston University, says.
Was Einstein’s first wife Mileva Maric the coauthor of his relativity paper?
Now a new analysis seeks to settle the matter. In the the late 1980s, the American physicist Evan Walker Harris published an article in Physics Today suggesting that Einstein first wife, Mileva Maric, was an unacknowledged coauthor of his 1905 paper on special relativity.
Did Joffe see Einstein’s 1905 paper before it was published?
The trouble with the first claim is that it is simply not true. This story seems to have come from Dr. Trbuhović-Gjurić, who claims that Joffe saw the manuscript of the 1905 relativity paper before it was published, and that it had both Einstein’s and Marić’s names on it.