FIRST EDITION OF THE EVOLUTION OF PHYSICS, SIGNED AND DATED BY EINSTEIN IN THE YEAR OF PUBLICATION
EINSTEIN, Albert, and INFELD, Leopold. The Evolution of Physics. The Growth of Ideas from Early Concepts to Relativity and Quanta. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1938. Octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. Housed in a custom clamshell box.
First edition, signed and dated by Albert Einstein in the year of publication.
Albert Einstein saw Evolution of Physics as a means of emphasizing “his realist approach” and further used “the text to defend the utility of field theories amid the advances of quantum mechanics… There was a third reason that Einstein helped to write this textbook, a more personal one. He wanted to help Leopold Infeld, a Jew who had fled Poland, collaborated briefly in Cambridge with Max Born, and then moved to Princeton.” When Infeld timidly approached Einstein with the idea of writing a history of physics, he was barely “able to stammer out his proposal. ‘This is not at all a stupid idea,’ Einstein said.’ Not stupid at all. We shall do it” (Issacson, 463-5). On publication The Saturday Review of Literature praised Evolution of Physics as “masterly… Einstein and Infeld’s book should do much to spread an understanding and appreciation one of the great dramas in the evolution of human thought.” Early issue dust jacket with reviews on rear cover, $3.00 price to rear dust jacket flap. With three full-page and numerous in-text illustrations and diagrams. Boni et al. 235.
Text fine, front inner paper hinge with minor expert reinforcement, lightest edge-wear to near-fine book; mild spine toning, faint rubbing, some chipping to upper edge of extremely good dust jacket.