“THE WHOLE OF SCIENCE IS NOTHING MORE THAN A REFINEMENT OF EVERYDAY THINKING”: FIRST EDITION OF OUT OF MY LATER YEARS, WARMLY INSCRIBED BY ALBERT EINSTEIN TO A FELLOW SCIENTIST
EINSTEIN, Albert. Out of My Later Years. New York: Philosophical Library, (1950). Octavo, original navy cloth, original dust jacket. Housed in a custom clamshell box.
First edition of Einstein’s second collection of social science-related articles, addresses, speeches, letters, and papers covering the period before, during, and after the Second World War, inscribed by him in German to a fellow scientist, “Dr. Blunck mit herzlichen Wünschen aber ohne die Zumutung, das Zeug t—sachlich zu lesen” (Dr. Blunck, With heartfelt wishes but without the unreasonable expectation to actually read these ramblings).
Commenting on the potential conflict of science and politics, Albert Einstein once turned to an assistant and sighed, “Yes, time has to be divided this way between politics and our equations” (DSB). In this continuation of his first collection of essays, The World As I See It (1934), Einstein offers further thoughts crossing that divide, mirroring his political, social, philosophical and scientific concerns. Drawn from articles, speeches, letters and various papers, all written from 1934 to 1950, with many published here for the first time, the book includes selections on science, ethics, public affairs, issues in Jewish history, the dilemma of modern war and tributes to figures such as Marie Curie, Isaac Newton and Mahatma Gandhi. Recipient Dr. Blunck was a German scientist who, like Einstein, emigrated to the United States. Einstein was especially grateful to the bacteriologist for treating Einstein’s cat “Tiger” with penicillin in 1946—as is noted in the additional laid-in photocopy of correspondence from Einstein.
Book fine, very lightest toning to bright price-clipped dust jacket. A fine copy, scarce inscribed.