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Einstein Defiant: Genius versus Genius in the Quantum Revolution
 
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Einstein Defiant: Genius versus Genius in the Quantum Revolution [Hardcover]

Edmund Blair Bolles (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0309089980 978-0309089982 December 10, 2003 1
"I find the idea quite intolerable that an electron exposed to radiation should choose of its own free will, not only its moment to jump off, but also its direction. In that case, I would rather be a cobbler, or even an employee in a gaming house, than a physicist." -Albert Einstein

A scandal hovers over the history of 20th century physics. Albert Einstein — the century’s greatest physicist — was never able to come to terms with quantum mechanics, the century’s greatest theoretical achievement. For physicists who routinely use both quantum laws and Einstein’s ideas, this contradiction can be almost too embarrassing to dwell on. Yet Einstein was one of the founders of quantum physics and he spent many years preaching the quantum’s importance and its revolutionary nature.

The Danish genius Neils Bohr was another founder of quantum physics. He had managed to solve one of the few physics problems that Einstein ever shied away from, linking quantum mathematics with a new model of the atom. This leap immediately yielded results that explained electron behavior and the periodic table of the elements.

Despite their mutual appreciation of the quantum’s importance, these two giants of modern physics never agreed on the fundamentals of their work. In fact, they clashed repeatedly throughout the 1920s, arguing first over Einstein’s theory of "light quanta" (photons), then over Niels Bohr’s short-lived theory that denied the conservation of energy at the quantum level, and climactically over the new quantum mechanics that Bohr enthusiastically embraced and Einstein stubbornly defied.

This contest of visions stripped the scientific imagination naked. Einstein was a staunch realist, demanding to know the physical reasons behind physical events. At odds with this approach was Bohr’s more pragmatic perspective that favored theories that worked, even if he might not have a corresponding explanation of the underlying reality. Powerful and illuminating, Einstein Defiant is the first book to capture the soul and the science that inspired this dramatic duel, revealing the personalities and the passions – and, in the end, what was at stake for the world.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Albert Einstein sought throughout his career to understand the ways of "the Old One," his nickname for the deity. Not one to chase after theory just because the math worked, Einstein adopted an equation like E = mc2 only if he could demonstrate how it played out in the physical world. Nor did he believe that the Old One was capricious, letting a photon of light masquerade as a particle one moment, as a wave the next. Einstein always sought to explain an unambiguous, consistent reality. As author Bolles (The Ice Finders, etc.) shows, this placed him at loggerheads with Niels Bohr and his Copenhagen school of quantum physics. Bohr was the pragmatist to Einstein's purist, looking for theories that worked, whether or not they made sense. Bolles conjures up the lost world of Europe between the wars, an era when readers would snatch up newspapers with Einstein's latest paper printed on the front page. In addition to his flair for bringing to life the cultural background of Einstein and Bohr's scientific battle (with occasional slips: Schoenberg did not compose the opera Wozzeck), Bolles exhibits a marvelous facility in explaining the intricacies of relativity and the world inside the atom. Readers who can never keep the three B's—Bohr, Born and de Broglie—straight will know what their roles were in 20th-century physics by the end of the book, which is highly recommended for science buffs as well as readers of biography and cultural history.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Scientific American

Bolles intertwines a rich combination of scientific explanation and literary drama, painting a picture of Einstein's persona, the European mind-set, and the soap opera of quantum physics. The focus is on Einstein's battle for causality, the idea that every event has a cause and can thus be predicted.

Editors of Scientific American


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 356 pages
  • Publisher: Joseph Henry Press; 1 edition (December 10, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0309089980
  • ISBN-13: 978-0309089982
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.2 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #755,288 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

14 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Research Enlivens a Great Story, October 28, 2004
This review is from: Einstein Defiant: Genius versus Genius in the Quantum Revolution (Hardcover)
The research behind this book is amazing. The author has stuffed this book with many little facts that enrich the scenes. For example, there is a chapter in which Einstein and his rival Niels Bohr first meet and walk together through Berlin while they dispute physics. It sounds arcane, but the research Bolles did brings the story alive. First, it is plain that there is no record of what the two men actually said. Bolles does not make up dialogue, but he presents the two scientists' positions in back-and-forth form so it feels like a debate. There are many scenes in the book where Bohr and Einstein dispute in this manner. The research necessary to understand the changes in their arguments at different times must have been great. On top of that, the author includes descriptions of Berlin while the two men walk through neighborhood after neighborhood. Added to this is an account of the absentmindedness of the two as they ignore the city around them. The result mixes science, humor, and 1920's Berlin into a scene that is as sharp as something in a movie. And there is scene after scene like this. The catastrophe of inflation that destroyed everybody's savings (including that of Einstein's wife) never sounded so hellish. I noticed that one Amazon reviewer complained about this book's research, but that is unfair. We get data from old guidebooks, photos, diaries, letters, newspapers, science journals, and many other sources. These details are seamlessly sewn together into one grand fabric.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful Book fro the Centenary!, February 7, 2005
By 
This review is from: Einstein Defiant: Genius versus Genius in the Quantum Revolution (Hardcover)
Anyone looking for something other than a straightforward biography of Einstein should consider this wonderful book, a full exposition of Einstein's vision of science and of the world science describes. By looking at the clash of approaches between two major 20th Century thinkers, Bolles elucidates a larger cultural clash that animates the 20th and, now, the 21st centuries, between those who are careless of ideals and essences, focused on "whatever works," and those who are more concerned with meaning and grasping something whole.

In his review of Bolles' book in the Washington Post "Book World," David Bodanis wrote that this "tender, insightful book" is "the best popular account I know of this central episode in 20th-century thought." "Tender" is an unusual word to associate with a book about such a subject, but Bolles, whose list of writings is as varied as it is extensive, manages to bring a seriousness of purpose to all his work which extends well beyond an accumulation of facts, to something quite profound about the nature of man and his struggle with Being.

THe book on Einstein for this year (and next)? Blair Bolles' "Einstein Defiant."
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17 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Mediocre book on a great topic, August 1, 2004
By 
Michael White (Saint Louis, MO, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Einstein Defiant: Genius versus Genius in the Quantum Revolution (Hardcover)
This book covers a fascinating and important topic, but it fails to live up to its potential. There are several problems that weaken the book.

First, Bolles' writing style often gets in the way and on some occassions reads like a Freshman descriptive writing assignment. While he's right in his goal to weave in world events and the personal lives of the main figures with a discussion of the science, his execution is awkward.

Second, the book is plagued by the use of dubious analogies to explain the experimental and theoretical physics of the quantum revolution. As a scientist (but not a physicist), I find that the analogies often seem incorrect or misleading.

Finally, the book relies very heavily on secondary sources, which perhaps is only a minor problem in a book aimed at a popular audience.

I still enjoyed the book because the subject is fun and fascinating, and because it is a book that makes an effort to deal with both the personalities and the science in early 20th century physics.
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