Sujet : Re: How did Einstein Develop his Field Equations? When: A. He admitted having little math
De : r.hachel (at) *nospam* liscati.fr.invalid (Richard Hachel)
Groupes : sci.physics.relativityDate : 25. Dec 2024, 16:07:59
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Le 25/12/2024 à 02:37,
clzb93ynxj@att.net (LaurenceClarkCrossen) a écrit :
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.
Einstein was the greatest crook of all time.
With the interested complicity of German physicists, even Anglo-Americans, too embarrassed that the theory of resistivity was an Irish invention (Joseph Larmor) finalized by a Frenchman (Henri Poincaré).
Einstein, absolutely useless in maths (I don't even know if he had Hachel's level (Baccalaureate level), would never have been able to write at 27 years old in September 1905 the Lorentz transformations, if Poincaré had not sent them to him in Bern, in June of the same year.
General relativity (which requires obvious mathematical skills) could not have been written by him either, who could barely do an integration at the first year university level.
It was Hilbert and Gross who wrote his equations for him.
There are in the human universe, three immense crooks.
-Muhammad, Saint-Paul, Anbert Einstein.
I don't know any greater ones.
All the others are below.
R.H.