“A
calm and modest life brings more happiness than the pursuit of success
combined with constant restlessness,” reads one of the notes, written in
German on the hotel’s.
Einstein scribbled his theory of happiness in
place of a tip. It just sold for more than $1 million.
Russian military parade marks World War II Stalingrad anniversary
A crowd gathered at the Square of the
Fallen Fighters in Volgograd, Russia Feb. 2 to mark the 75th anniversary
of the six-month Battle of Stalingrad.(Reuters)
He is known as one of the great minds in 20th-century science. But this week, Albert Einstein is making headlines for his advice on how to live a happy life —and a tip that paid off.
In November 1922, Einstein was traveling from Europe to Japan for a lecture seriesfor which he was paid 2,000 pounds by his Japanese publisher and hosts, according to Walter Isaacson’s biography, “Einstein: His Life and Universe.”
During the journey, the 43-year-old learned he’d been awarded his
field’s highest prize: the Nobel Prize in physics. The award recognized
his contributions to theoretical physics.
News of Einstein’s
arrival spread quickly through Japan, and thousands of people flocked to
catch a glimpse of the Nobel laureate. Impressed but also
embarrassed by the publicity, Einstein tried to write down his thoughts
and feelings from his secluded room at the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo.
That’s
when the messenger arrived with a delivery. He either “refused to
accept a tip, in line with local practice, or Einstein had no small
change available,” according to the AFP.
Instead,
Einstein wrote two short notes and handed them to the messenger. If you
are lucky, the notes themselves will someday be worth more than some
spare change, Einstein said,according to the seller of the letters, a resident of Hamburg, Germany who is reported to be a relative of the messenger.
Those
autographed notes, in which Einstein offered his thoughts on how to
live a happy and fulfilling life, sold at a Jerusalem auction house
Tuesday for a combined $1.8 million.
A
picture taken on October 19, 2017, shows Gal Winner, owner and manager
of the Winner’s auction house in Jerusalem, displays two notes written
by Albert Einstein, in 1922, on hotel stationary from the Imperial Hotel
in Tokyo Japan. (Menahem Kahana/AFP/Getty Images)
“A calm and modest life brings more happiness than the pursuit of success combined with constant restlessness,” reads one of the notes, written in German on the hotel’s stationery.
It
just sold for $1.56 million. The letter had originally been estimated
to sell for between $5,000 and $8,000, according to the Winner’s
Auctions and Exhibitions website.
Gal Wiener, chief executive of
the auction house, said the bidding on that note began at $2,000 and
escalated for about 25 minutes, the Associated Press reported.
“Where there’s a will, there’s a way,” read the other
note, written on a blank sheet of paper. That note sold at auction
for $240,000 and was initially estimated to sell for a high of $6,000.
Neither the buyer’s nor the seller’s identity has been made public.
Roni Grosz, the archivist overseeing the Einstein archives at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, told the AFP that the notes help uncover the innermost thoughts of a scholar whose public profile was synonymous with scientific genius.
“What
we’re doing here is painting the portrait of Einstein — the man, the
scientist, his effect on the world — through his writings,” Grosz said.
“This is a stone in the mosaic.”
Einstein was among the founders of
the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and gave the university’s first
scientific lecture in 1923. He willed his personal archives, as well as
the rights to his works, to the institution.
Back in 1922, Einstein six-week tour of Japan was a huge success.
“Close
to twenty-five hundred paying customers showed up for his first talk in
Tokyo, which lasted four hours with translation, and more thronged the
Imperial Palace to watch his arrival there to meet the emperor and
empress,” Isaacson wrote.
The country also left a strong impression on him.
“Of
all the people I have met, I like the Japanese the most, as they are
modest, intelligent, considerate, and have a feel for the art,” he wrote
his sons, Isaacson’s biography recounted.
Einstein was still traveling during the Nobel award ceremony
in December 1922, so he was absent when the chairman of the Nobel
Committee for Physics said that “there is probably no physicist living
today whose name has become so widely known as that of Albert Einstein.”
Perhaps Einstein would have settled for something more “calm and modest.”
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If only Donald Trump had taken the advice of Albert Einstein. The U.S. would look very different. The message is about 140 characters (all Donald's brain can consume at any given time).
Stan_Dup
10/29/2017 10:31 PM GMT+0630
Sadly, he is unable to comprehend the words calm and modest.
There is a superb article on "Einstein and the Atomic Bomb" in http://www.doug-long.com/einstein.htm.
It is especially relevant in the current times wherein US, Russia,
France, UK, Israel, Pakistan, India, China, and North Korea have nuclear
weaponry, (US having over 4,000 of them).
The last paragraph in it says the following:
.............................. In
November 1954, five months before his death, Einstein summarized his
feelings about his role in the creation of the atomic bomb: "I made one
great mistake in my life... when I signed the letter to President
Roosevelt recommending that atom bombs be made; but there was some
justification - the danger that the Germans would make them."
..............................
The
great and grave problem for humanity has been the lust for power and
megalomania of a few people who get to be heads of state through
different means ---"democratic process," either partially flawed or a
complete sham, "inheritance" from a dictator, such as in Syria and
North Korea, or a coup.
(For democratic process ---where "one
adult one vote irrespective of the thinking/discerning ability of an
adult" is the foundational principle--- to work admirably, a nation
needs to have at least a significant percentage of adults who possess
adequate thinking/discerning ability. Otherwise a nation ends up with
"democratically elected" heads of state having the caliber of Trump.)
Hitler had attained power in Germany "democratically." http://diebesteallerzeiten.de/blog/2009/02/19/was-...
With his insatiable lust for power and megalomania, he wanted to expand
his power in Europe. Einstein and a few others had feared that Hitler
might get scientists to develop an atomic bomb; so he suggested to
Roosevelt to have US scientists develop one. By now US has over 4,000
nuclear weapons, and the above mentioned other nations too have their
own nuclear weapons ---invariably of course "only for defensive
purpose."
See More
Stan_Dup
10/29/2017 10:42 PM GMT+0630 [Edited]
In
a nutshell Einstein said it best. "The lust for power and megalomania
of a few people who get to be heads of state through different means
......either partially flawed or a complete sham." Einstein
We
are all witnessing the "complete sham" at the highest levels. Einstein
went on to say "a nation needs to have at least a significant percentage
of adults who possess adequate thinking/discerning ability". We did,
unfortunately our electoral system allowed those adults who do not have
"adequate thinking/discerning ability" to over-rule the majority who do.
"Where
there is a will, there is a way." Did Einstein coin that? Everyone has
said/heard that one, but I'm just wondering if it was a well used phrase
in 1922, as it is today, or he was the actual originator. Because if he
wasn't the creator of that tidbit it's kind of funny, sort of like
getting a note from Stephen Hawking that might say "A penny saved is a
penny earned." Gee thanks, genius.