Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on The Life and Times of Mileva Maric. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 7 page paper provides an overview of the life and times of Maric who was also Albert Einstein's first wife. The paper explores the possibility of the claim that it was Maric who co-authored the theory of relatively but did not get any credit. Much evidence does suggest that Maric was influential. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA344MME.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
school; Mileva was the only female student at the academy they attended (2003). It was a time when women were rarely seen in the sciences. In any event, the pair
had a child and married in 1903 (2003). His parents were against the marriage (Einstein et al., 1992). It seems that Albert is enthralled with Mileva and his parents objections
do not stop them from marrying and pursing a life together. Yet, Albert reports many arguments with his mother over the marriage (1992). This is not the typical love story.
Yes, they fall in love so to speak but after marriage things go downhill. Also, much of their relationship is based the pursuit of science and some have speculated that
it was Mileva who was the brains behind the couples success. It seems that after marriage, Mileva became the typical mother and wife but that Albert was not happy with
that. Some have speculated that it was Mileva, and not Einstein, who really came up with the important ingredients in Alberts best known theories. There is evidence that supports each
side and while it will never be known for sure, it pays to take a look at the life and times of this brilliant woman who was hardly noticed. After
all, Albert would later go to the United States with a new wife and leave his old troubles behind. But did Mileva get fair recognition or was she seen as
just the wife of a famous man? Mileva worked closely with her husband Albert Einstein, but her participation in Alberts findings is controversial ("Mileva," 2003). She was for example intrigued
by the nature of the relationship between "the velocity of a molecule and the distance traversed by it between collisions" (2003). She even wrote about this to Einstein (2003). In
...