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San Lwin - Einstein
San Lwin - Einstein
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The author's wish
This book is a preface to the intentions and desires of the author.
I don't think so.
From the moment the reader begins to read this book until the end, every word they read will speak of the author's will.
The success of this effort does not depend on the author. It depends on the assessment of how much this book can meet the demands of the times or a need. I think that after reading this book, you will know its value. If you know this, the author's wish will be fulfilled, and Einstein is the embodiment of the philosophy of science.
San Lwin
Second set of messages
The person who compiled and submitted this book did not write his message in the first volume of Einstein. He only mentioned his desire and dedication to compile the book.
Now, in the second volume of Einstein, the author has completed his first attempt at presenting a presentation to the Burmese literary world, researchers, and students about Einstein and the world of science, and has written his message.
At this time when Myanmar's scientific literature is in its infancy, the author is proud to have written about Einstein, a world-renowned scientist. It would not be wrong to say that this article is the first step towards the emergence of a large number of scientific literature in the future.
'Science has been developing in the world for a long time, and the scientific edifice is enormous. For a human being to pursue science in this era,
The ancients developed and built the sciences, and let them study them for a lifetime. I wonder. Life will only end. It will not be finished by studying what others have studied. In this way, studying and practicing, the benefit of human life, the development of production, and the development of human civilization are the practical applications of science, and this part is now of great importance. Although science can be used by later people to benefit human life, but the work of science is not finished with just two.
Science is a treasure trove hidden in the natural world. It is not difficult to discover this treasure trove and pass it on to future generations. Working on this treasure trove is much more difficult. This is not the work of ordinary people in the field of science. It is the work of highly skilled scientists. They are the ones who create new things and discover new things.
This new room for invention, this room for discovery, this room for penetrating the great laws of nature, is in the field of science.
It is a source of water. It makes the scientific building large and wide. It is a room that adds treasures to the treasury of science. In this way, whatever has been carved out and discovered by the talented and learned people of nature, the future generations have to use it. Therefore, it is not difficult to use it. It is difficult to discover it.
In modern science, the practical application of science is increasingly being replaced by practice. This is because the economic and cultural needs of the country and the people are met with the help of science.
The creative part of science is called theoretical science. Those who study and pursue this theoretical science are
Ordinary people cannot do it. They must have a strong sense of perfection. And perfection is nothing else but relentless perseverance and great effort.
In Myanmar, there is a saying that if you try, you will become a god. One day, Myanmar will not only be able to apply science in practice, but also to innovate. Today, when we look at the future of science, we can only rely on the talented young students of Myanmar. We must rely on them. We must nurture and develop scientific heroes and geniuses from among them. This is our responsibility today.
Seeing how much hard work and suffering a great theoretical scientist like Einstein went through to become a scientific genius would be inspiring and inspiring for the young people of Myanmar, so I have compiled some interesting facts about this great scientist.
This publication is not only aimed at university students, but also at farmers and workers who can read, so that they can understand it and, if they understand it, they will have the desire to make their children scientists. I have written it in an easy and interesting way.
It's written in such a simple way that some scholars may feel dissatisfied and wonder, "Why shouldn't we emphasize the academic aspect?"
However, I feel that science should be written in such a simple and clear way before it becomes too familiar to the public.
This is a fascinating story, written about Einstein's life, endeavors, and principles.
San Lwin
Chapter (1)
Ivory statue and ivory house
The iron door to the room on the top floor was open. The floor of the room was polished and polished, making it shiny and clean. The walls had only been painted white once, so they were no longer shiny. The bookshelf against one wall of the room was filled with letters and journals. There was not a single book from the Great Book of the Bible, but on the other wall was a sheet of metal.
There was only one picture of Sir Isaac Newton hanging on the wall. Two armchairs were placed on the floor near the wall. The wall by the door was
The glass window above was closed. The window panes were blurred by the snow. “Only a faint light shone on the face of a man sitting at the small table in the living room.
That man was none other than Albert Einstein, the most famous and prominent scientist in the history of science after Newton. Einstein was a theoretical physicist. However, at that time, when he was 40 years old, the world did not know about Einstein as much as it does now.
He was busy with a pencil and a piece of paper, scribbling away, working on a math problem. The problem was not an easy one to solve. He thought for a while and stopped. He was running his fingers through his long, gray hair on his head, twisting it around. Every time he couldn't write down any more numbers or letters, he would twist his hair with his fingers. Sometimes, when he felt tired, he would take one of the three black sticks that were on the table and hold it between his teeth. The stick had been extinguished, and because he had been drinking a lot, the smoke was already rising.
In the dim light that filtered through the window, his face shone with ivory, like a statue of ivory. Although he was forty years old, his face was smooth, but the skin around his eyes was slightly wrinkled. Dark
"Amidst the long, dark hair, there are also white hairs growing in between."
The corners of his eyebrows, which rose to the sky, seemed to indicate an endless stream of thought. As one of his friends said, his eyes were the eyes of an angel, pure and honest. All in all, he was a handsome man. Einstein was a man of great talent, and in the world of physics he created, he was a man of great talent.
He was drifting away. He had no focus except for the focus on physics.
The Einstein family lived in a room on the top floor of a seven-story building on Haraldstrasse in Berlin. This apartment was part of a bustling city like Berlin, and while the outside world was bustling, the Einsteins' room was quiet. The dim lighting and natural light made it seem like a place to relax.
Einstein was enjoying life alone in a quiet room.
He is trying his best to find the answer to the question of why the entire universe is moving as it is now. His thoughts are constantly filled with millions of ideas, and his life is so entangled in these ideas that he cannot even pay attention to what is happening in the outside world. When he focuses on the outside world, the cruel and cruel outside world only makes him sad. So for him, the only thing that makes him happy is to hide in the inner world of physics.
“How wonderful it would be if there were some islands somewhere inhabited by wise and kind-hearted people,” he once lamented in a letter to a friend.
There was no island like the one he wanted to live in. There was nothing but a small room on the top floor of a seven-story building, a place of escape. That room was his refuge and his peace of mind.
It was November 7, 1919. Political activity was in full swing in Berlin. He had to keep his room door closed so that he would not see or hear the ugly world around him. The whole city of Berlin was already in turmoil due to the communist movement of the Bolsheviks.
The streets of Berlin, covered in snow, were filled with the sounds of protesters. Defense Minister Gastonovsky's supporters had barricaded the streets with barbed wire. Soldiers and armored vehicles were ready to explode, ready for action.
The scenery of Berlin that morning was grim. The streets were covered in snow, the hospitals were lined with barbed wire, and the nameless babies who had just arrived into the world were also suffering from the bitter cold.
They died. There was no fuel to heat the hospital. The veterans were selling cigarettes. Along Frederick Street.
There is an eerie silence in the city. Almost all the factories are closed.
The middle-class houses on the outskirts of Berlin are empty. Even potatoes are being bought at high prices on the black market, there is no butter, no milk, no sausages. There is no wood in the stoves. People are starving. The laughter has died down.
The Einstein family, who lived on Harberin Street, were not even known to their neighbors. Elsa Einstein was a simple, elegant, and beautiful woman. Elsa's daughters, Ilse and Margo, were young girls. They also lived with the Einsteins. They did not have jobs. Only Einstein was always busy with work. .
Einstein and Elsa were second wives. However, they were not yet married, and only those around them considered them husband and wife. Ilse and Madoc were Elsa's daughters from her first marriage. Albert Einstein also had two sons from his first marriage. They live in Switzerland with their mother.
The women on Habarin Street don't know about these things.
November 7, 1919, was a significant day in Einstein's life. Newspapers in Berlin and around the world published articles about Professor Einstein. The universe (Oksha)
They explicitly declared that Einstein's physical views and theories had revolutionized all of man's knowledge of the world.
This story began in London and spread around the world. The London scientific community was deeply influenced by Einstein's scientific views and
One prediction was checked and found to be exactly as he had predicted.
As soon as Einstein's views and predictions were accepted as correct, Newton's views and scientific theories, which had no equal in the world, were realized to be wrong.
Euclid's geometry is no longer useful. Einstein's theory is that two lines can be parallel, and his theory that space is curved is correct, and no one can deny that the sun's rays, which he finally demonstrated, are not straight, but curved.
