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Part 1 - The Institute Libraries - Institute for Advanced Study

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and fqortant. He declined to accept Einstein's offer to give him the<br />

modest sum needed. <strong>The</strong>n, in his blackest moment, Infeld hit upon a simple<br />

plan which, if Dr. Einstein uould agree, would save the day. He suggested<br />

-- -<br />

rrftfng, under the Professorrts supelvisian and vith his caaperation,a pop-<br />

ular account of the evolution of physics which would be published in both<br />

their names. To his delight, the Professor agreed, and during the long<br />

hot smmes of 1937 the younger ran slaved over the work, consulting the<br />

master on occasions,. and incidentrlly overcoming his deficiencies in us-<br />

ing English. Finally ttie book was published, yielding much more in his<br />

share than the $600 on which he had mzde out somehow during the previous<br />

academf c year. 102<br />

bthematicians and mtherratlal physicists seemed not inclined<br />

to <strong>for</strong>get or <strong>for</strong>give that Einstein had achieved his uork in physics by<br />

thinking in physics rather than through mathematics. Thus Veblen, writ-<br />

ing in 1923 to Simon Flexner, (See IV, note 7) opined that though the<br />

great physicist used mathanatfcs as a "tooLm he probably could not have<br />

discwered the genersl theory cf relativity without the 2 . four-<br />

dimensional geometry earlier worked out at Guttingen. Dr. Birkhoff sug-<br />

gested that Einstelnws general theory "made natural the surmise that all<br />

physics might be looked at as a kind of extended gcometxy... do3 i)~.<br />

Frank qwtes David Rilbert of GBttingen in two passages which indicate<br />

recognition of this.<br />

Every boy fn tIte streets of our mathemtfcal GUttingen under-<br />

stands more about four-dirensional geometry than Einstein,<br />

Yet, despite that, Einstein did the work, and not the mathe-<br />

mattclans.<br />

And again, speaking this time t o mathemeticians:

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