English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I think Albert Einsten had two children with his first marriage. I am curious to know if his genes are being carried.

2007-02-22 12:04:10 · 3 answers · asked by David Conrad 1 in Science & Mathematics Physics

3 answers

you can find his daugher on Yahoo Answers...in the science category...she thinks she knows it all

2007-02-22 12:09:47 · answer #1 · answered by susieozbornehiphop 2 · 0 0

I was willing to wade through this grammatical nightmare until I came to, "I believe we evolved from monkeys." Then I just cursed the US public education system for the 32nd time tonight. Of course morals are possible without god. A good argument would be the millions of moral Buddhists on Earth. That said, I urge you to look up the definition of the word PARAGRAPH. EDIT: Your reasoning is totally specious. Believing in Darwinism (let's call it evolution) doesn't make science evil, and if you choose to believe that evolution is the mechanism through which life evolved, that doesn't mean you have to ignore the weak and sick. If you CHOOSE to ignore the weak and sick that certainly makes you immoral (according to our societies current standards), but science remains a neutral bystander. It has nothing to say about whether the choices you make are right or wrong. Evolutionary theory does not judge the moral consequences of natural selection. Scientists did not "invent" evolution so that some people could choose it as a less moral way of living. Natural selection is a harsh process. If you're a clam, you don't see this, but if you're a human being with an evolved fore brain and limbic system, you feel that it's immoral, possibly even evil. Science does not make this discrimination. It simple describes what IS. In any event, you can not avoid "survival of the fittest." Even if you devoted your entire life to altruistic endeavors, your mere existence causes some things to die so that you may live. That is how nature works.

2016-05-24 00:27:56 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Mileva was pregnant when they married, and the resulting daughter disappears from history (adoption?, death?). Hans, his first son had three children, Bernhard, Klaus, and Evelyn (adopted). Klaus died in infancy. Bernhard has 5 five children.

Eduard, Albert's second son, was schizophrenic, and died in an asylum as a young man.

2007-02-22 12:25:04 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers