Category: Nuclear Physics
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The Collected Works of Albert Einstein
This Collection stakes its scholarly claim on sequence and texture: by presenting Einstein’s principal scientific writings together with his authoritative expositions, contemporaneous debates, and carefully chosen supplementary essays, it lets the conceptual movement of his physics become legible as a single, tension-bearing trajectory. The distinctive contribution lies in the alignment of research papers, lectures, and…
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The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, Volume 4: The Swiss Years: Writings, 1912-1914
The distinctive scholarly stake of The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, Volume 4: The Swiss Years: Writings, 1912–1914 lies in its careful assembly of texts that document the conceptual and technical struggle by which Einstein sought to unify the relativity principle, the equality of inertial and gravitational mass, and the conservation of energy–momentum into a…
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The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, Volume 3: The Swiss Years: Writings, 1909-1911
The third volume of the English translation of The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, The Swiss Years: Writings, 1909–1911 isolates a short but decisive interval in which Einstein’s research program bifurcates and then recombines: from the classroom to the journal page, from statistical mechanics to radiation theory, from kinematics to gravitation, and finally from a…
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The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, Volume 2: The Swiss Years: Writings, 1900-1909
The distinctive scholarly stake of this translation volume lies in its doubly mediating function: it returns Einstein’s 1900–1909 writings to the conditions of their original formulation—terminology, mathematical notations, and rhetorical textures—while synchronizing those conditions with an English idiom restrained to accuracy rather than fluency. The contribution is therefore twofold. It assembles, in strict sequence and…
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The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, Volume 1: The Early Years, 1879-1902
The scholarly stake of this translation volume lies in its disciplined reconstruction of a young researcher’s cognitive, affective, and social formation through a corpus that has been stabilized, ordered, and rendered into English under an explicit editorial constraint: to preserve documentary texture over literary smoothness. The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, Volume 1: The Early…
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Albert Einstein: The Meaning of Relativity
Einstein’s The Meaning of Relativity secures a distinctive place in the literature because it compresses a complete conceptual itinerary—from classical kinematics to the relativistic unification of gravitation and geometry—into a set of lectures whose unity of method is continuously tested and amended across successive editions. The book’s scholarly stake is double: first, it re-derives the…