[ANN] Release 8.1.0 DP 2

Jacques Clavel jacques.clavel at gmail.com
Thu Jul 7 13:16:45 EDT 2016


I don't know if Einstein was a genius or not, but if I had a quarter of the
genius of Einstein, Ill be very, very, very happy :-))

2016-07-07 15:45 GMT+02:00 Lagi Pittas <iphonelagi at gmail.com>:

> If we are going to bring up einstein , he is the "scientist"  I think who
> everybody defers to and yet he was basically a 100% fraud and a plagiarist.
>
> His equation  was publshed by the italian physicist De pretto and many
> others.
>
> While I was making sure I remembered my facts I found this - and other than
> a couple of new ones on me (Isaac Newton and Preston - all the others I had
> heard of)
>
>
> https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/einstein-did-not-derive-e-mc2-first.28362/
>
> But he missed out Lorentz so I found this:
>
>
> naturalphilosophy.org/site/harryricker/2015/05/23/the-origin-of-the-equation-e-mc2/
>
> One thing to not is that Poincare sent einstein a lecture he was going to
> give a few days before eistein publish his paper (using Poincare's paper -
> with no acknowledgement)  in face His papers had
> no footnots, credits or anything and it was still published.
>
> Now here is the kicker Eienstein (the Genius <barf>) didn't get his Nobel
> prize in 1906 or 1907 but in 1921 and not for the theory of relativity but
> for
>
>  "for his services to Theoretical Physics, and especially for his discovery
> of the law of the photoelectric effect".
>
> Why? because although many of the people who knew he was a fraud had died -
> there where still people alive who knew the truth so they could't bring
> themselves to give it to him for
> "the greatest equation ever".
> )
> Some years  before he died he admitted that the equation stemmed from
> Maxwells equations (a true Genius if ever there was one, up their with R.P.
> Feynman  Feynman and Nikola Tesla)
>
> |I know this is off topic but I have known about thus liar and fraud for so
> may years.  When we say he's an Einstein we should be saying he's a TESLA.
>
> Einsteins wife  Mileva was probably the brains read about his philandering
> and payment to here to keep quiet.
>
> In Walter Isaacson's biography we get a list of the conditions he gave to
> Mileva
>
> *A. You will make sure:*
>
> *1. that my clothes and laundry are kept in good order;*
> *2. that I will receive my three meals regularly in my room;*
> *3. that my bedroom and study are kept neat, and especially that my desk is
> left for my use only.*
>
> *B. You will renounce all personal relations with me insofar as they are
> not completely necessary for social reasons. Specifically, You will
> forego:*
>
> *1. my sitting at home with you;*
> *2. my going out or travelling with you.*
>
> *C. You will obey the following points in your relations with me:*
>
> *1. you will not expect any intimacy from me, nor will you reproach me in
> any way;*
> *2. you will stop talking to me if I request it;*
> *3. you will leave my bedroom or study immediately without protest if I
> request it.*
>
> *D. You will undertake not to belittle me in front of our children, either
> through words or behavior.*
>
>
>
> *
> http://www.openculture.com/2013/12/albert-einstein-imposes-on-his-first-wife-a-cruel-list-of-marital-demands.html
> <
> http://www.openculture.com/2013/12/albert-einstein-imposes-on-his-first-wife-a-cruel-list-of-marital-demands.html
> >*
>
>
> But Isaacson still drinks the coolaid of Einstein as a genius.
>
> One thing to note all other papers he ever wrote where with others -
> (probably totally written by the other) but using Einsteins name to add
> gravitas to the paper.
>
> I have not seen one quote attributed to Einstein that somebody else had not
> said before, but  the one we are talking about here
>
> https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Rita_Mae_Brown
>
> Before I finish
>
> Here is where I check if a quote is attributable to someone. I found it
> years ago when I got so pissed off with yes you read my mind all these
>  quotes from the Genius Einstein that I knew where either Voltaire, Twain,
> Disraeli and so many more (they do the same with Winston Churchill btw).
>
>
> http://quoteinvestigator.com/2013/04/06/fish-climb/
>
> Thanks Richmond I have another hour or more of programming to catch up on.
>
> Now don't get me started on OBAMA with the Nobel peace prize - Cognitive
> Dissonance anyone?
>
> <END OF RANT>
>
> Kindest Regards
>
> Lagi
>
> btw read the book "Genius"by John Gribben  about the real Genius Richard
> Feynman and you will find a few anecdotes that will add fuel to this
> particular funeral Pyre
>
> And While your at it
> "Surely your joking Mr Feynman"
> and
>  "What do you care what other people think" both by Ralph Leighton.
>
> I don't care if you're not into science - you won't put them down they are
> that  good (How to pick up Women and Crack safes - and the Space Shuttle
>  Challenger story).
>
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZOzoLdfWyKw
>
>
> On 7 July 2016 at 10:11, Richmond <richmondmathewson at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > It is amazing how many "wise" sayings are attributed to many "Wise"
> > people: Voltaire and Einstein included. This, I believe, is a human
> > tendency to seek authority to their ideas by ascribing them to
> > authority figures: like religious (and 'religious') people ascribing
> > everything wise to their scripture.
> >
> > R.
> >
> > On 7.07.2016 11:09, Jacques Clavel wrote:
> >
> >> Mark wrote :
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> *At any rate, the quote is variously ascribed to Einstein and to
> Benjamin
> >> Franklin, but probably originated with Voltaire:Lorsque l'on effectue
> une
> >> action, atteint un mauvais résultat, puis répète l'action plusieurs fois
> >> attendent un meilleur résultat, on est un peu fou de singe, non? --
> >> Réflexions sur la jonque*
> >>
> >> I have found the Wikiquote english site, which says that...
> >> But this quote is not a correct sentence in french. Correct sentence
> would
> >> be :
> >> "Lorsque l'on effectue une action, atteint un mauvais résultat, puis
> >> répète
> >> l'action plusieurs fois *en attendant* un meilleur résultat, on est un
> peu
> >> fou de *recommencer*, non?"
> >>
> >> And I have not found "Réflexion sur la Jonque" in the list of the text
> >> from
> >> Voltaire. Perhaps it exists, but I have not found it.
> >> Ah the Web data source...
> >>
> >> 2016-07-07 3:40 GMT+02:00 Mark Wieder <mwieder at ahsoftware.net>:
> >>
> >> On 07/06/2016 10:44 AM, Richmond wrote:
> >>>
> >>> Not true; Albert Einstein [The man who knew a lot about Physics and
> >>>> Maths and not much else and
> >>>>
> >>>> Best to stick to things you know something about, yes?
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> At any rate, the quote is variously ascribed to Einstein and to
> Benjamin
> >>> Franklin, but probably originated with Voltaire:
> >>>
> >>> Lorsque l'on effectue une action, atteint un mauvais résultat, puis
> >>> répète
> >>> l'action plusieurs fois attendent un meilleur résultat, on est un peu
> fou
> >>> de singe, non?
> >>>
> >>>   -- Réflexions sur la jonque
> >>>
> >>> --
> >>>   Mark Wieder
> >>>   ahsoftware at gmail.com
> >>>
> >>>
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> >>
> >>
> >
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-- 
Jacques Clavel



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