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#1
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Stephen wrote:
10 points to the first person to identify the author of these words, and 2 points for the date they were published. "In this connection it is of importance to note that when we exclude certain possibilities that would give rise to still greater intricacy, the form of comparison used by Einstein to present the theory is the only possible one; the principle of the freedom of choice in co-ordinates was the only one by which he needed to allow himself to be guided. Although thus there was no special effort made to reach a connection with the theory of Newton, it was evident, fortunately, at the end of the experiment that the connection existed." I see Randy Gerl beat me to a guess of Hermann Weyl. The sentence structure still has that German feel to me, so I'll go with Karl Schwarzschild, 1916. ---Tim Shuba--- |
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#2
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On Sun, 10 Aug 2003, shuba wrote:
Stephen wrote: 10 points to the first person to identify the author of these words, and 2 points for the date they were published. "In this connection it is of importance to note that when we exclude certain possibilities that would give rise to still greater intricacy, the form of comparison used by Einstein to present the theory is the only possible one; the principle of the freedom of choice in co-ordinates was the only one by which he needed to allow himself to be guided. Although thus there was no special effort made to reach a connection with the theory of Newton, it was evident, fortunately, at the end of the experiment that the connection existed." I see Randy Gerl beat me to a guess of Hermann Weyl. The sentence structure still has that German feel to me, so I'll go with Karl Schwarzschild, 1916. That's interesting, but no. Lots of good tries this evening. In addition to being very prominent, well known in the field, and not being from our recent decades, one more hint: The author and Einstein had the utmost respect for each other's abilities. (2nd and 3rd tries are allowed.) -- Stephen Ignorance is just a placeholder for knowledge. Printed using 100% recycled electrons. ----------------------------------------------------------- |
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#3
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Stephen wrote:
On Sun, 10 Aug 2003, shuba wrote: Stephen wrote: 10 points to the first person to identify the author of these words, and 2 points for the date they were published. "In this connection it is of importance to note that when we exclude certain possibilities that would give rise to still greater intricacy, the form of comparison used by Einstein to present the theory is the only possible one; the principle of the freedom of choice in co-ordinates was the only one by which he needed to allow himself to be guided. Although thus there was no special effort made to reach a connection with the theory of Newton, it was evident, fortunately, at the end of the experiment that the connection existed." I see Randy Gerl beat me to a guess of Hermann Weyl. The sentence structure still has that German feel to me, so I'll go with Karl Schwarzschild, 1916. That's interesting, but no. Lots of good tries this evening. In addition to being very prominent, well known in the field, and not being from our recent decades, one more hint: The author and Einstein had the utmost respect for each other's abilities. Okay then, I'll cross a border. Hendrik Lorentz, 1923. ---Tim Shuba--- |
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#4
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On Sun, 10 Aug 2003, shuba wrote:
Stephen wrote: On Sun, 10 Aug 2003, shuba wrote: Stephen wrote: 10 points to the first person to identify the author of these words, and 2 points for the date they were published. "In this connection it is of importance to note that when we exclude certain possibilities that would give rise to still greater intricacy, the form of comparison used by Einstein to present the theory is the only possible one; the principle of the freedom of choice in co-ordinates was the only one by which he needed to allow himself to be guided. Although thus there was no special effort made to reach a connection with the theory of Newton, it was evident, fortunately, at the end of the experiment that the connection existed." I see Randy Gerl beat me to a guess of Hermann Weyl. The sentence structure still has that German feel to me, so I'll go with Karl Schwarzschild, 1916. That's interesting, but no. Lots of good tries this evening. In addition to being very prominent, well known in the field, and not being from our recent decades, one more hint: The author and Einstein had the utmost respect for each other's abilities. Okay then, I'll cross a border. Hendrik Lorentz, 1923. You crossed the right border. Lorentz it is. 10 points for that! (I'll bet Lorentz' words are a surprise to many.) However, the date is not correct. Still have 2 points for the correct date. -- Stephen Ignorance is just a placeholder for knowledge. Printed using 100% recycled electrons. ----------------------------------------------------------- |
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