English, asked by SujayKumar8539, 6 months ago

How did Albert's idea work?

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Answered by nagalakshmirjn
1
Nobel Prize-winning physicist Albert Einstein is perhaps the best proof of this truth. Einstein is known for publishing ”the most beautiful of theories” during the first half of the 20th century—scientific masterpieces that would change humanity’s understanding of space, time, and gravity, the mechanics of the universe itself. But according to theoretical physicist Carlo Rovelli, Einstein wouldn’t have come up with those theories if he hadn’t been inclined to just hang around—seemingly without purpose.


The seeds of Einstein’s incredible ideas were planted during the year he took off from high school in the 1890s, during which he contemplated the world with no pressure to pass exams or accomplish anything at all. Einstein “spent a year loafing aimlessly,” Rovelli writes in Seven Brief Lessons on Physics. “You don’t get anywhere by not ‘wasting’ time.”

Einstein was obsessed with science, and he did go back to school. But he was able to understand the world in a way no one else had in part because he spent a lot of time at sea.

As a teenager, he learned to sail, and it was out on the water that he observed the workings of the universe and came to understand that space and time were curved, findings that revolutionized science. In a 1930 letter, Einstein wrote to mathematician Oswald Veblen, “Nature conceals her secrets because she is sublime, not because she is a trickster.”


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Answered by Diyakarki200
1

Answer:

Albert's idea worked when he thought of opening a cigratte shop on a busy street where there are no cigratte shops. From- The Verger

Explanation:

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