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  EINSTEIN ON THE ROAD 
 By Josef Eisinger 
 Prometheus Books 
 Copyright © 2011   Josef Eisinger 
All right reserved.
 ISBN: 978-1-61614-460-9 
    Chapter One 
                         Setting the Stage    
  In 1912, while Einstein occupied the chair for theoretical physics at  Prague's German University, he visited Berlin for the first time. At that  stage, he had already won wide recognition among physicists for his  work in quantum physics and for his special theory of relativity, but he was  by no means the celebrity he was to become in the 1920s. His weeklong stay  in Berlin gave him an opportunity to meet with Max Planck, whom he  greatly admired for having introduced quanta into physics, and with other  renowned scientists then working in Berlin, Europe's preeminent center of  physics research. But Einstein also used his visit for an affectionate reunion  with his cousin Elsa Löwenthal, whom he had known since childhood. She  had recently divorced and was now living in Berlin with her two teenage  daughters.  
     Two years later, Einstein was offered a munificent academic position in  Berlin, truly an offer he could not—and did not—refuse. He consequently  took up residence in the Prussian capital in 1914, arriving with his wife,  Mileva, and their two young sons. But the marriage ended in acrimony soon  after, and a few months later, the First World War broke out. Einstein's  divorce did not become final until 1919, and when it did, he married Elsa.  The couple established their household in Berlin, and the city remained their  home until the Nazis came to power in January 1933. It was therefore as a  Berliner that Einstein experienced the bleak years of World War I, their violent  aftermath, and the bracing and turbulent years of the Weimar Republic,  until its demise.  
     The present chapter sets the stage for Einstein's travel decade by  reviewing the historical events that preceded it and by providing an outline  of Einstein's earlier life and work.  
  
  BACKGROUND: WILHELMINE BERLIN  AND THE RUSH TO WAR  
  At the time of Einstein's visit to Berlin in 1912, the German Reich was just  forty years of age. It had been assembled from numerous German principalities,  most of them herded together under the dynamic leadership of Prussia,  the Reich's most powerful member state. The emergence of a united Germany  in 1871 represented the fruits of three victorious wars that Prussia  waged against Denmark, Austria-Hungary, and France and also of the tireless  diplomatic efforts of Prussia's prime minister, Count Otto von Bismarck.  The newly created German state was nominally a constitutional monarchy,  governed by a council, with limited input from an elected parliament, the  Reichstag. In practice, however, most of the power was vested in the person  of the kaiser, who was also king of Prussia, for the constitution gave him the  authority to dismiss the governing council, as well as the Reichstag. Bismarck  remained the Reich's guiding spirit from its inception until 1890,  when he fell out with the newly anointed Wilhelm II. The new kaiser was by  all accounts a vain and insecure young man who was not prepared to be overshadowed  by his principal minister. The break came over a dispute regarding  social policy, but its most profound effect was in foreign policy, for Wilhelm  dismantled Bismarck's policy of negotiating interlocking alliances with the  other great European powers as the means of ensuring Germany's security.  
     Wilhelm II put a more aggressive policy in place: he declined to renew  the treaty with Russia that Bismarck had negotiated, and he was vociferous  in his demands for "a place in the sun" for Germany alongside the European  empires that were already in possession of the most desirable colonial real  estate. Above all, Wilhelm was jealous of the global power exercised by  Great Britain, which was ruled by his grandmother, Queen Victoria. He felt  that his English relatives did not pay him the respect due to an emperor, and  he was particularly envious of his uncle Albert, the Prince of Wales. He  alienated "Uncle Bertie" by his boisterous behavior and poor sportsmanship  during the Cowes regatta, that extravagant annual gathering that drew the  cream of the European nobility to the Isle of Wight. It was in yacht racing  that Wilhelm and Albert acted out their rivalry during the 1890s. Wilhelm  even established his own grand regatta in Kiel, in an attempt to rival the  Cowes regatta, but it was not a success. Queen Victoria tried hard to mend  relations between the two ruling houses. She even offered her difficult  grandson Wilhelm the title of Honorary Admiral of the Fleet, but to no avail.  The breach between the two dynasties was further exacerbated when Wilhelm  meddled in the Boer War, sending Paul Kruger, the president of the  short-lived Boer Republic, a congratulatory telegram that hinted at Germany's  support against Britain.  
     Perceiving Britain as a greater threat to Germany than Russia and France,  Wilhelm ordered the rapid expansion of his Imperial Navy so that it might challenge  the supremacy of the Royal Navy, Prince Albert's pride and joy. Admiral  Alfred von Tirpitz was charged with building a powerful new battle fleet—a  provocation that Britain, with her many far-flung possessions, could hardly  ignore. Britain responded by commissioning even faster, better-armed, and  better-armored battleships, such as HMS Dreadnought, and Germany  responded in kind. As the arms race between the two navies escalated, contemporary  observers perceived it as a contest to decide who would rule the world.  
     On land, Wilhelm appointed Alfred von Schlieffen as army commander,  to succeed Helmuth von Moltke, the celebrated hero of the Franco-Prussian  War. Schlieffen's strategic plan for crushing France called for German armies  to thrust west through Belgium before turning south, toward Paris, while  employing a blocking force in the east to contain Russia. The plan recognized  that a quick victory in the west was essential, since Germany could not  win a protracted war. The Schlieffen plan was the strategic basis of the Triple  Alliance of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy, which was arrayed against  the Entente powers: Britain, France, and Russia. Historians have offered  many reasons for the nations' headlong plunge into war, but it cannot be  denied that Wilhelm's personality flaws and his espousal of militaristic  nationalism played a significant role. Einstein was, of course, thoroughly  familiar with the history of Wilhelmine Germany, and nothing could have  been more repugnant to his instinctive pacifism than the kaiser's policies.  
     A word, finally, about the internal politics of Wilhelmine Germany. The  rapid industrialization and urbanization during the second half of the nineteenth  century led to enormous shifts in the German population and to  growing influence of the working classes and the Social Democratic Party  (SPD). Bismarck tried to limit the political power of the socialist parties, and  at one time actually outlawed them, but in the wake of the 1912 general election,  the SPD became the largest party in the Reichstag. Since that was Germany's  last general election until after the war, the SPD had a powerful voice  in the creation of the Weimar Republic.  
  
  BEFORE BERLIN (1879–1914)  
  Soon after Einstein settled in Berlin, the war that many had seen as inevitable  became a stark reality. The exultation with which the German public welcomed  war appalled Einstein, particularly because this war euphoria infected  many of his academic colleagues. Vienna, London, and Paris greeted the outbreak  of war with similar enthusiasm. Einstein's dismay must be seen in light  of his lifelong loathing of militarism and of all herdlike behavior of people.  Many years later, he wrote that any man who enjoys marching in formation  earned his loathing, for that man had surely obtained his large brain in error:  "Heroism upon command, senseless brutality and wearisome patriotism,  with what fervor I despised them, and how base and despicable war seems  to me. I would rather let myself be cut to pieces than participate in such evil  doings!" Only when Hitler's rise to power was complete did Einstein  modify his pacifist principles.  
     It was his abhorrence of the Prussian-style militarism that prompted the  fifteen-year-old Einstein to leave his native Germany in 1894 and to relinquish  his Württembergian and German citizenship two years later. He  remained stateless until he won his dearly treasured Swiss citizenship four  years thereafter.  
     How, then, was it possible that twenty years later, Einstein found himself  in the employ of the Prussian state and living in its capital? To understand  this paradox, it is necessary to recall Einstein's life and work before he took  up residence in Berlin.  
                                      * * *  
  Einstein's ancestors on both his parents' sides belonged to the Swabian Jewry  that had long resided in the many small towns of Swabia, a region in southern  Germany that is now part of the state of Württemberg. His father's family had  lived in the little town of Buchau for generations, in times when Jews were  severely restricted in choosing their residence and occupation. During the  course of the gradual emancipation of German Jews in the wake of the  Napoleonic era, many restrictions gradually disappeared, and by the second  half of the nineteenth century, enterprising Jews were able to enter new trades  and to migrate from their native small towns to larger cities. Several of the  Buchau Einsteins migrated to the nearby ancient city of Ulm; Einstein's  father, Hermann, was among them. In 1876, Hermann married Pauline Koch,  who had a similar Jewish-Swabian background, although hers was of a worldlier,  well-to-do family that operated a successful grain business.  
     On March 14, 1879, Hermann's and Pauline's son, Albert, was born into  this closely knit yet geographically dispersed family, a circumstance that,  many years later, explains how Einstein could call on relatives in several far-flung  places that he visited on his travels. Albert was described as an amiable  child who began to talk very late but who, once he did, would silently  construct complete sentences before articulating them. As a child, Albert was  given to occasional violent temper tantrums; he did not enjoy playing with  other children, preferring his own company. It was said that when he was  among children, he conveyed an aura of isolation—an aura he would retain  all his life.  
     Shortly after Albert was born, Hermann joined his youngest brother,  Jakob, in a business venture that obliged the family to move to Munich, and  soon after that the family was augmented by the birth of Albert's sister, Maja.  But even though the family had left Ulm, they never lost their soft Swabian  dialect or the Swabian fondness for diminutives: to his family, Einstein  would always remain their "Albertle." When Einstein was six, he entered the  Catholic public school, where he was the only Jew in his class and was  exposed to anti-Semitic taunting by his schoolmates. He was a very good, if  not an exceptional, student, both in this school and later, in the Luitpold  Gymnasium in Munich. He excelled in mathematics, but he chafed under the  school's strict discipline, and he resented having to study a subject merely to  pass an examination. At the Luitpold Gymnasium, the teachers laid the  greatest stress on Latin and Greek and paid scant attention to mathematics  and science, subjects that Einstein studied on his own.  
     Einstein's mother, Pauline, played the piano, and it was she who introduced  young Albert to music. He received his first violin lessons at age six,  but he rebelled against his teachers' "mechanical" approach. At age thirteen,  when he became acquainted with Mozart's violin sonatas, his passion for  music was aroused, and he soon became a largely self-taught but proficient  amateur violinist. When Einstein was in his twenties, living in Bern and  Zurich, he was in great demand as a chamber-music player. He remained  deeply devoted to music for the rest of his life.  
     Like most members of the largely assimilated German Jewry, Einstein's  parents acknowledged their Jewish heritage freely but paid little heed to the  observance of religious practices. As a result, Albert received his first religious  instruction at the Luitpold Gymnasium and passed through a brief  period of religious fervor. While it lasted, he refused to eat pork at home, and  he composed hymns to the greater glory of God. But shortly before his  scheduled bar mitzvah, this religiosity came to an abrupt halt when he had  his first encounter with science and he disavowed formal religion. Many  years later, Einstein recalled that the popular science books he read at the  time had convinced him that the stories in the Bible could not be true, and  this had made a devastating impression on him. He became a fanatical freethinker  with a "skeptical attitude towards all beliefs that happen to be prevalent  in the current social environment"—an attitude he retained all his life. 6  
     The science books that affected Einstein so profoundly were presented  to him by Max Talmud, a medical student in Munich who was the Einsteins'  dinner guest every Thursday evening—possibly in approximate deference to  the Jewish tradition of inviting an impoverished Bible scholar to the weekly  Sabbath evening meal. Talmud also presented Albert with a Euclidean geometry  book that affected the boy deeply: "Here were assertions ... that can be  proved with such certainty that any doubt seemed out of the question. This  clarity and certainty made an indescribable impression on me."  
     Jakob Einstein, Hermann's business partner, was a graduate engineer,  the only one of five siblings to attend an institution of higher learning. He  took charge of the technical aspects of their engineering firm, while Hermann  was the business manager. The firm manufactured dynamos, arclamps,  and other electrical equipment, and it benefited from the boom in the  embryonic electrical industry at the end of the nineteenth century. The enterprise  prospered initially, but when the brothers' bid for the construction of  Munich's lighting system lost out to much larger electrical engineering concerns,  the firm was forced out of business. In 1894, the two brothers entered  into another engineering venture, this time in Italy, and the two families  moved to Milan. Albert was left behind in Munich, however, to live with a  distant relative, so that he could complete his studies at the gymnasium and  earn his Abitur (high school graduation) certificate—a sine qua non for any  presentable member of the German middle class.  
     Einstein missed his family dearly, and he chafed under the school's rigid  teaching methods, but he stuck it out at the gymnasium for half a year. Determined  to escape, he managed to obtain a letter from a physician—Max  Talmud's older brother—stating that he was undergoing a nervous breakdown.  The letter called on the school to release him for six months so that he could  recuperate in the care of his parents. The school obliged, and in December  1894, Einstein appeared unannounced at his parents' doorstep in Milan. He  assuaged their serious misgivings by promising that he would study on his own  all summer and would then apply for admission to the prestigious Polytechnikum  in Zurich (now the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, or ETH).  
     Einstein enjoyed his Italian summer thoroughly, but he failed to pass the  ETH entrance examination in the fall. His examiners did, however, recognize  that they were dealing with a child prodigy, and they urged Einstein to  attend the cantonal high school in Aarau for one year in order to catch up in  his two weakest subjects, French and chemistry, before applying again. Einstein  followed this excellent advice, and his school experience in Aarau contrasted  sharply with that at the Luitpold Gymnasium. He was fortunate in  being able to lodge in the home of Jost Winteler, a teacher at the cantonal  school, with whom Einstein developed a close and long-lasting friendship,  as he did with all members of the Winteler family. They made Einstein feel  like one of them, and Jost Winteler's liberal political views probably played  a role in Einstein's decision to renounce his German citizenship. Several  years later, Einstein's sister, Maja, married a son of the Wintelers, making  Einstein truly a member of the family; and later one of the Winteler daughters  married Michele Besso, one of Einstein's closest and oldest friends.  
  (Continues...)  
  
     
 
 Excerpted from EINSTEIN ON THE ROAD by Josef Eisinger  Copyright © 2011   by Josef Eisinger.   Excerpted by permission of Prometheus Books. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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