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The relative importance of Mrs Einstein

NEW ORLEANS



WHILE developing the theory of special relativity in the years around

1905, Albert Einstein lived and worked with a fellow student who became

his first wife. The late Mileva Einstein-Maric now has a small band of

supporters who argue that she should get some – may be most - of the

credit for that work.

The Einsteins studied physics together at the Federal Polytechnic School

in Zurich. They got similar grades, though both were mediocre compared

with other students in their class. In letters to his wife, the young Einstein often discussed the ideas and

experiments that led him (or her, or both) to discover special relativity.

In New Orleans, Dr Evan Walker, a physicist who works at a cancer institute in Aberdeen,

Maryland, presented letters hinting that Mileva did much more than listen to and advise her husband.

Albert repeatedly referred to "our work", "our investigation" and "our theory". In one letter he wrote,

"How happy and proud I will be when the two of us together will have brought our work on the

relative motion to a victorious conclusion!"

Dr Walker found another hint of Mileva's contributions in the memoirs of a Russian physicist,

Abraham Joffe. Joffe referred to four important papers credited to Albert alone as being by "Einstein-

Marits". Dr Walker argues that Joffe probably did see both names on the original manuscripts because

he was unlikely to have known this Hungarian variant of Maric. Unfortunately the original manu-

scripts have disappeared and Joffe is dead.

There are several interpretations of these and other smidgens of fact. Dr Senta Troemel-Ploetz, a

linguist at the German Research Institute in Bonn, contends that Albert exploited the talent and labour

of his wife, stole ideas from her, and expected her to do his mathematics after she had finished cooking

dinner and washing up the dishes.

Dr Troemel-Ploetz argues that Mrs. Einstein was the brains in the family. Mileva would need

exceptional talent and ambition to qualify for the exclusive Polytechnic school at a time when few

women studied science. According to her, Mrs Einstein failed to win recognition because of the

discrimination that discouraged women from scientific achievement. This, combined with Mileva's

struggle to support herself and her children after Albert left her in 1914, thwarted her scientific career.

Dr John Stachel of Boston University, who recently edited a new collection of Einstein's letters, put

the traditional point of view. He found no hard evidence of any creative contribution from Mileva. Few

of her letters to Albert remain and none of them contains any original ideas on physics. He thinks

Albert often referred to "our work" simply because he was in love.

Mileva Maric was certainly capable of understanding her husband's work and possibly of

collaborating with him. Dr Walker thinks her knowledge and experience may have complemented his.

Mileva may have provided knowledge of the Michelson-Morley experiment, which measured the

speed of light in different directions, and had profound implications for relativity. Einstein once said

that he did not know about the experiment when he developed his theory; at other times he said he did.

With such meagre evidence in the present, it would probably take a trip back to the beginning of

this century to unseat the traditional view of the Einsteins. Unfortunately, Albert's general theory of

relativity - finished a year after their separation - rules out such shortcuts.



THE ECONOMIST FEBRUARY 24 1990



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