Difference between revisions of "Part III of Einstein's Book "Relativity, The Special and The General Theory""
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==Abstract== | ==Abstract== | ||
− | In Part III of Einstein's book he first deals with questions about the structure of the universe from the standpoint of Newton's theory of gravitation and then from the standpoint of his own conclusion that the universe must be finite and yet unbounded at the same time. He then spends most of the rest of the book rationalizing this self-contradiction with arguments involving pure logic alone. | + | In Part III of Einstein's book he first deals with questions about the structure of the universe from the standpoint of Newton's theory of gravitation and then from the standpoint of his own conclusion that the universe must be finite and yet unbounded at the same time. He then spends most of the rest of the book rationalizing this self-contradiction with arguments involving pure logic alone. |
− | [[Category:Relativity]] | + | [[Category:Scientific Paper|iii einstein 's book relativity special general theory]] |
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Relativity|iii einstein 's book relativity special general theory]] |
Latest revision as of 19:49, 1 January 2017
Scientific Paper | |
---|---|
Title | Part III of Einstein\'s Book \"Relativity, The Special and The General Theory\" |
Read in full | Link to paper |
Author(s) | Vincent W Carpenter |
Keywords | {{{keywords}}} |
Published | 2014 |
Journal | None |
No. of pages | 5 |
Read the full paper here
Abstract
In Part III of Einstein's book he first deals with questions about the structure of the universe from the standpoint of Newton's theory of gravitation and then from the standpoint of his own conclusion that the universe must be finite and yet unbounded at the same time. He then spends most of the rest of the book rationalizing this self-contradiction with arguments involving pure logic alone.