Another story about Einstein is told by a small girl who sees an apparently crazy man standing in a public square in front of a fountain waving his hands in front of his face. He turned to her and said:
"See! If you wave them at the right speed and look through your fingers, you can make the droplets stand still!"
That's the story that has always stuck with me, the delight in simple, elementary techniques to reveal things that otherwise can't be seen.
The story of progressing from the simple through phases to greater and greater complexity is also of value.
Definitely in the way it's told. But that doesn't automatically mean that the story isn't true. I'm sure RD could report on Barack Obama's election and make you doubt it really happened..
Someone on the previous thread did some good research. I believe it's golden. Yes, RD does occasionally publish fiction but I believe, without heading to my city library's microfiche archives, that it is true.
Yes, the story was a winner of Reader's Digest's "First Person" story award - for unique, _true_ personal experiences. See page 214 of the Nov 1955 edition of Reader's Digest for more details.
It's hard to tell if this is authentic or not. It's easy to confirm (e.g. by Google Book Search) that it was published in Reader's Digest by Jerome Weidman in 1955. What's not clear is whether the incident ever happened or to what extent Weidman embellished it. I wouldn't hold the style of the piece against it; everything in Reader's Digest is like that, or used to be, and 1955 was probably a good year for smarm. On the other hand, "it appeared in Reader's Digest" isn't much evidence of anything.
A modern version of this story could include links to all 12 recordings, so you could follow along at home, as if with your own personal Einstein. It makes me think that the internet must be helping to accelerate technological advancement, singularity-style. Although, it might be mainly at the dissemination stage, rather than the cutting-edge. And... the same thing was probably thought of for television...
Of course, the key ingredients here are not informational resources - but someone who is profoundly interested in your growth, who is profoundly capable, and... someone you'll actually listen to.
20 comments
[ 2.4 ms ] story [ 50.0 ms ] threadhttp://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=589608
Another story about Einstein is told by a small girl who sees an apparently crazy man standing in a public square in front of a fountain waving his hands in front of his face. He turned to her and said:
"See! If you wave them at the right speed and look through your fingers, you can make the droplets stand still!"
That's the story that has always stuck with me, the delight in simple, elementary techniques to reveal things that otherwise can't be seen.
The story of progressing from the simple through phases to greater and greater complexity is also of value.
Oldie, goodie, and definitely worth remembering.
A whole book of learning and wonder and beauty. If it doesn't make you cry, read it again.
Definitely in the way it's told. But that doesn't automatically mean that the story isn't true. I'm sure RD could report on Barack Obama's election and make you doubt it really happened..
I've always read it under the assumption it isn't true - but that it's such a wonderful story Im going ot pretend it is anyway :)
http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=591165
"3 points by gry 289 days ago | link
Seems on the up and up to me. Originally published in 1955 in the Reader's Digest by Jerome Weidman.
The table of contents are highlighted in this eBay posting, corroborating the byline."
Updated Ebay auction search for November 1955 Reader's Digest, see the TOC image from [updated] ebay listing:
"The Night I Met Einstein by Jerome Weidman . . . . . .61
http://cgi.ebay.com/Readers-Digest-November-1955_W0QQitemZ38...
Einstein was not only a great genius, but also a great person. If you study a little about the man, you can easily believe this story to be genuine.
Great, great man.
It seems for want of a better word - just too pat.
A modern version of this story could include links to all 12 recordings, so you could follow along at home, as if with your own personal Einstein. It makes me think that the internet must be helping to accelerate technological advancement, singularity-style. Although, it might be mainly at the dissemination stage, rather than the cutting-edge. And... the same thing was probably thought of for television...
Of course, the key ingredients here are not informational resources - but someone who is profoundly interested in your growth, who is profoundly capable, and... someone you'll actually listen to.