• Re: How did Einstein Develop his Field =?UTF-8?Q?Equations=3F=20When=3A

    From Richard Hachel@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 26 00:00:35 2024
    Le 25/12/2024 à 23:54, neus a écrit :
    Richard Hachel wrote:
    Le 25/12/2024 à 20:44, clzb93ynxj@att.net (LaurenceClarkCrossen) a écrit : >>> On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 19:32:36 +0000, LaurenceClarkCrossen wrote:

    I hate to resort to ad hominem, but Einstein's character is unavoidably
    involved. He is known to have claimed not to have known of the MMX when
    he wrote his 1905 paper. He also claimed to have read before the 1905
    article a lengthy 1890 article with a long discussion of the MMX by
    then, thus contradicting himself. I do not regard him as honest. I
    regard his theory to be as fake as it can be.

    What theory?
    He spent his life copying other people's.
    He was just a very average student with no ability other than copying
    (he was then sent to the Bern office and employed as a copyist).

    You see Henri Poincaré sent as a copyist to Bern, you?

    In my opinion, Albert Einstein was just a media creation, like Saint
    Paul was a creation of the Roman Empire to soften the first Christian
    theories by sweetening them with laughable and grotesque facts for an
    erudite Jew.

    An erudite Jew will immediately laugh at the idea that the good Lord
    came to mate with "Mary of Nazareth", a city that never existed except
    in the sick brains of historians, and was created out of whole cloth in
    the eighth century by the crusaders who were surprised not to find
    Nazareth on the maps.

    Albert Einstein is the same. When in 1905, the church was separated from
    the state, a new prophet was needed to replace the church, and someone
    charismatic enough to look like an old Jewish prophet.

    Albert Einstein, unable to solve an equation involving an integral, was
    then mandated for the role, as Rome mandated Saint Paul.
    --------------------------

    Saint Paul was mandated by God.

    Impossible.
    Too many contradictions in his behavior.
    His false humility, his false miracles, his false apparition (that no one sees), his false doctrine, his prediction by Jesus Christ (that the
    Antichrist was already of this world and was going to manifest himself to
    take the place of the apostle of God, his blessing of the Empire (he
    benefited from the protection of 70 horsemen, and had the right to travel
    the empire, while the Christians were being crucified).
    All this does not hold up to a second.
    As for his style, it is easy to take down; he says hidden things that
    could be taken for mysteries, but becomes laughable in things that are not hidden, and when he says that pure souls will flutter around the good
    Lord, or that the eye has not seen the greatness of God, and that he uses quantities of abstract and incomprehensible terms, etc...
    It is clearer than a thousand fires when you have the key.
    He is obviously a nutcase who mandated himself, and whose goal was to
    torpedo the doctrine of Jesus Christ from within. His position is also extremely intelligent, he does not deny Jesus Christ, but distorts him
    from within. It is much more sordid and effective.

    R.H.

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  • From Richard Hachel@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 31 20:33:28 2024
    Le 31/12/2024 à 21:06, Ross Finlayson a écrit :
    On 12/31/2024 12:16 AM, J. J. Lodder wrote:
    rhertz <hertz778@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 29 Dec 2024 15:06:47 +0000, J. J. Lodder wrote:

    LaurenceClarkCrossen <clzb93ynxj@att.net> wrote:

    On Wed, 25 Dec 2024 11:50:23 +0000, J. J. Lodder wrote:

    LaurenceClarkCrossen <clzb93ynxj@att.net> wrote:

    How did Einstein Develop his Field Equations?

    When:
    A. He admitted having little math and no ability in non-Euclidean >>>>>>> geometry.
    B. He always relied on someone else to do his math.
    C. He denied getting it from Hilbert.
    D. He never said who he got it from.

    Answer:
    He stole them from Hilbert.

    Hilbert disagreed,

    Jan
    Here are two other versions of the quote;

    "Every street boy in Gottingen knows as much elliptical geometry as
    Einstein. But the equations are his."

    "Every boy in the streets of Gottingen understands more about
    four-dimensional geometry than Einstein. Yet, in spite of that, Einstein >>>>> did the work and not the mathematicians." — David Hilbert

    There is only one way to interpret this. That is Hilbert pointing out >>>>> that obviously Einstein did not invent the field equations because he >>>>> could not.

    That is your way, and it is obviously wrong.
    Hilbert chides his fellow mathematicians, and hence himself,
    for not having found the correct equation of general relativity,
    despite their superior technical skills.
    Hilbert goes on to state that:
    In spite of that it was Einstein who got there.

    You may guess what Hilbert did next: (see the ref supplied by RH)
    ====
    On December 4th, Hilbert even nominated Einstein for election as a
    corresponding member of the Göttingen Mathematical Society.
    (So to his own backyard, where all those superior Gottingen
    mathematicians dwelt. It was the highest honour he could bestow
    personally)
    ====

    Just what you would expect Hilbert to do,
    if he considered Einstein an incompetent bungler
    who had just stolen his results.

    You had better forget about all this.
    You are wrong about it, period.

    Jan

    Stop talking idiocies,

    [snip abuse, and new irrelevancies]

    Do you deny that the text I quoted is in the reference you gave?

    Jan


    In Huerter's book "Too Big for a Single Mind"
    he says that Hilbert was always saying that
    he came up with these before Einstein did.

    He relays they were on friendly terms,
    after quite a spat, about it.

    Yet, at least some sources say Hilbert was first.

    The time will come when people will say, when Einstein was seven years
    old, he already knew all the equations of geometry in 26 dimensions.

    And they will say: "At 12, he taught Hilbert, and Gross how to calculate
    the horizon of the black hole in an eighty-dimensional universe".

    Don't laugh, friends.

    You don't know yet the depth of human stupidity.

    R.H.

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  • From Richard Hachel@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jan 3 16:27:38 2025
    Le 03/01/2025 à 15:44, Maciej Wozniak a écrit :
    W dniu 03.01.2025 o 14:38, J. J. Lodder pisze:

    Or private teachers even before Gymnasium,
    or autodidactic.

    This is indeed the case. Einstein was extremely good at math,

    But apart of that he was just an arrogant, mumbling
    idiot.

    He was above all a good copyist.
    Why do you think he was placed in the international patent office in Bern?
    When will this political-media joke stop?

    R.H.

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  • From Richard Hachel@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jan 3 19:22:07 2025
    Le 03/01/2025 à 18:56, Maciej Wozniak a écrit :
    W dniu 03.01.2025 o 17:27, Richard Hachel pisze:
    Le 03/01/2025 à 15:44, Maciej Wozniak a écrit :
    W dniu 03.01.2025 o 14:38, J. J. Lodder pisze:

    Or private teachers even before Gymnasium,
    or autodidactic.

    This is indeed the case. Einstein was extremely good at math,

    But apart of that he was just an arrogant, mumbling
    idiot.

    He was above all a good copyist.


    Nope, his madness was quite unique in the history
    of mankind.

    Je ne le dirais pas comme ça, Einstein était loin d'être fou.

    Malhonnête, oui, un peu. Fou, surement pas.

    En prenant la place de Poincaré, puis en le déformant plus qu'en le bonifiant, et en ne le citant jamais dans ses renvois, Albert Einstein n'a jamais été clair.

    Lui même dira avant de mourir que le plus grand génie de l'histoire
    était pour lui Poincaré, et qu'il avait lu ses livres avec totale
    avidité.

    Je pense qu'une certaine forme de délire de grandeur a fait le reste,
    poussé par la folie anglo-saxonne, qui, bien qu'antisémite parfois, a toujours préféré Einstein à Poincaré, à une époque om la domination intellectuelle du monde s'exerçait entre la France et l'Angleterre.

    C'était à une époque d'avant guerre où l'Angleterre ne pouvait se
    permettre d'avouer que le plus grand génie de l'humanité était
    français, ni que ses paquebots insubmersibles pouvaient se péter tout
    seul en deux quatre jours après leur mise à flot au milieu de l'océan
    (14 avril 1912).

    L'histoire est ce qu'on en fait, pas ce qu'elle a réellement fournie.

    Même déclassifiées, certaines choses ne sont jamais sorties, tant on
    n'ose toujours pas les dire.

    R.H.

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  • From Richard Hachel@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jan 3 21:06:03 2025
    Le 03/01/2025 à 21:43, Mild Shock a écrit :

    Nevertheless he is attribute to have said:

    "I want to know God's thoughts; the rest are details."

    This is very strange for someone who wrote:
    "I cannot imagine a life after death. A God who will judge our actions and such. It is up to those who believe in such nonsense." Einstein was a
    profound atheist, although he openly supported the Jewish people.

    R.H.

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  • From Richard Hachel@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 4 16:19:08 2025
    Le 04/01/2025 à 07:40, Thomas Heger a écrit :
    Am Freitag000003, 03.01.2025 um 17:27 schrieb Richard Hachel:
    Le 03/01/2025 à 15:44, Maciej Wozniak a écrit :
    W dniu 03.01.2025 o 14:38, J. J. Lodder pisze:

    Or private teachers even before Gymnasium,
    or autodidactic.

    This is indeed the case. Einstein was extremely good at math,

    But apart of that he was just an arrogant, mumbling
    idiot.

    He was above all a good copyist.
    Why do you think he was placed in the international patent office in Bern?

    Possibly as a spy?

    C'est évident.

    TH

    R.H.

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