Relativity

The Special and the General Theory

Albert Einstein

Authorised Translation by Robert W. Lawson

Here you shall find some excerpts from Einstein’s book explaining the special and the general theories of relativity.

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1.  Physical Meaning of Geometric Propositions

Remembering Euclidian Geometry (p. 3)

In your schooldays most of you who read this book made acquaintance with the noble building of Euclid’s geometry, and you remember—perhaps with more respect than love—the magnificent structure, on the lofty staircase of which you were chased about for uncounted hours by conscientious teachers.  By reason of our past experience, you would certainly regard everyone with disdain who should pronounce even the most out-of-the-way proposition of this science to be untrue.  But perhaps this feeling of proud certainty would leave you immediately if some one were to ask you: “What, then, do you mean by the assertion that these propositions are true?”  Let us proceed to give this question a little consideration.

2.  The System of Co-ordinates

3.  Space and Time in Classical Mechanics

What is Position?  What is Space? (pp. 10–11)

It is not clear what is to be understood here by “position” and “space.”  I stand at the window of a railway carriage which is travelling uniformly, and drop a stone on the embankment, without throwing it.  Then, disregarding the influence of the air resistance, I see the stone descend in a straight line.  A pedestrian who observes the misdeed from the footpath notices that the stone falls to earth in a parabolic curve.  I now ask:  Do the “positions” traversed by the stone lie “in reality” on a straight line or on a parabola?  Moreover, what is meant here by motion “in space”?  From the considerations of the previous section the answer is self-evident.  In the first place we entirely shun the vague word “space,” of which, we must honestly acknowledge, we cannot form the slightest conception, and we replace it by “motion relative to a practically rigid body of reference.”  The positions relative to the body of reference (railway carriage or embankment) have already been defined in detail in the preceding section.  If instead of “body of reference” we insert “system of co-ordinates,” which is a useful idea for mathematical description, we are in a position to say:  The stone traverses a straight line relative to a system of co-ordinates rigidly attached to the carriage, but relative to a system of co-ordinates rigidly attached to the ground (embankment) it describes a parabola.

4.  The Galileian System of Co-ordinates

The Law of Inertia (p. 13)

As is well known, the fundamental law of the mechanics of Galilei-Newton, which is known as the law of inertia, can be stated thus:  A body removed sufficiently far from other bodies continues in a state of rest or of uniform motion in a straight line.  This law not only says something about the motion of the bodies, but it also indicates the reference-bodies or systems of co-ordinates, permissible in mechanics, which can be used in mechanical description.

5.  The Principle of Relativity (in the Restricted Sense)

6.  The Theorem of the Addition of Velocities Employed in Classical Mechanics

7.  The Apparent Incompatibility of the Law of Propagation of Light with the Principle of Relativity

The Special Theory of Relativity (pp. 23–24)

At this juncture the theory of relativity entered the arena.  As a result of an analysis of the physical conceptions of time and space, it became evident that in reality there is not the least incompatibility between the principle of relativity and the law of propagation of light, and that by systematically holding fast to both these laws a logically rigid theory could be arrived at.  This theory has been called the special theory of relativity to distinguish it from the extended theory.

8.  On the Idea of Time in Physics