Einstein for Beginners

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Einstein for Beginners
Writers & Readers
Pantheon Books
Icon Books
Media typePrint (Paperback)

Einstein for Beginners, republished as Introducing Einstein, is a 1979 graphic study guide to Albert Einstein and the theory of relativity written by Joseph Schwartz and illustrated by Michael McGuinness.

atomic bomb."[2]

Publication history

This volume was originally published in the

Icon Books
.

Selected editions:

Related volumes in the

For Beginners
series:

  • Manly, Steven L.; Fournier, Steven (2009). Relativity and Quantum Physics. Readers & Writers.

Related volumes in the Introducing... series:

Reception

Paul Thagard, writing in Science for the People, describes the book as "intelligible and entertaining,"[2] while Henry McDonald, writing in The Washington Post, describes it as "well illustrated and thoroughly researched."[3]

"Almost half the book," according to Nan Conklin, writing in Leonardo, "is devoted to recounting Einstein's early life and the influences on him."[1] "Its discussion of the political environment in which Einstein's discoveries were made is," according to McDonald, "informative."[3]

"The drawing and the words have a distinctly comic-book flavor," according to Conklin, but it is "only when the authors set out to explain Einstein's theories that the use of the peculiar mode of presentation seems justified."[1] McDonald says that "the presentation of the discoveries themselves is little short of inspired,"[3] while Thagard too commends the authors as "highly inventive in using amusing illustrations and humorous asides to lead the beginners through difficult concepts."[2]

While Conklin speculates that the publishers may have included a volume on Einstein in this series due to his belief in "the establishment of a socialist economy, accompanied by an educational system which would be oriented toward social goals,"[1] and McDonald confirms that the authors "go out of their way to emphasize [...] Einstein's socialism," Thagard is critical of the failure to "develop the social connections in a substantial way," and concludes that the volume does not provide a "basis for discussion of the role of science in society."[2]

References

  1. ^
    JSTOR 1575052
    .
  2. ^ a b c d Thagard, Paul (May–June 1981). "Ideas for Beginners" (PDF). Science for the People. 13 (3): 30–32. Retrieved 2017-01-15.
  3. ^ a b c McDonald, Henry (1979-10-07). "Modern Thought Made Easy". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2017-01-15.