Two outstanding experiences created cracks in his armor of atheistic certainty and disrupted what he calls his “web of belief” based on modern science.
Gravitational waves have long been a fascination among physicists. First posited by Albert Einstein in 1915, gravitational waves are ripples in the time-space continuum that exist in theory, but have been never directly observed in practice, the only part of general relativity that hasn’t been experimentally verified.
Many scientists believe that anything sent into a black hole would probably be destroyed. But a new study suggests that this might not be the case after all.
When he wasn’t busy scribbling out the theory of relativity, Albert Einstein seems to have spent a fair amount of time writing letters involving topics such as God
“In a dream I saw a table where all the elements fell into place as required. Awakening, I immediately wrote it down on a piece of paper.” -Dmitri Mendeleev