It's ALIVE!: Einstein's Jewish Science is Available
I've gotten independent confirmation from two sources -- including my friend Mohunch -- that Einstein's Jewish Science: Physics at the Intersection of Politics and Religion is now available. The first batch has already been shipped to pre-order folks by Amazon (although they ran out of their initial order and Johns Hopkins University Press has sent them more). It has been seen at brick and mortal retailers, you know, bookstores. If you are an e-reader person, it is downloadable from Amazon, but not yet at Barnes and Noble (that's for English, the Yiddish language version only works on selected oy-readers like the chai-pad).
I'm tickled with the way it came out and hope that it will be an enjoyable read for everyone.
- Is Addiction Itself Problematic?
I had lunch yesterday with my editors from Johns Hopkins University Press and one of them who ordered a cup of coffee was making light of her supposed caffeine addiction. It leads to the question whether such an addiction would be a problem. ...
- Einstein's Jewish Science: First Review
The first review of Einstein's Jewish Science: Physics at the Intersection of Politics and religion is up at Publishers Weekly. Prior to WWII, Nazi sympathizers dismissed Einstein?s theory of relativity as ?Jewish science.? Yet Einstein himself, notes...
- Indexical Obsolescence?
Tightening up the index for Einstein's Jewish Science. Last item before it goes to the printers. It will be released in mid-April in both hardback and e-book formats. If we are moving towards an all e-book world in the next decade...
- Why Do We Love Einstein?
Today is Einstein's birthday and as I put the finishing touches on the manuscript, Einstein's Jewish Science: Physics at the Intersection of Politics and Religion, I am thinking about the question in the last chapter -- why do we love Einstein?...
- Einstein's Jewish Science And Contemporary Science And Society
First, good news. Einstein's Jewish Science, the book project I have been working on with my colleague Stephen Stern has been picked up by the Johns Hopkins University Press. It should make it to bookstore shelves by March 2012. The project examines...