Well, it's true that most men have two brains, one in their head and the other between their legs, but Einstein actually only had one brain, and physiologically it was measured to be smaller in size than the average human brain. So size doesn't matter, after all.
2007-12-30 17:40:45
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answer #1
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answered by . 5
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Dr Einstein was a perfectly normal human being who looked at things a little differently than others at the time. He had a unique talent for seeing past basic issues that tended to stop others. I wish I could think like that.
2007-12-30 14:55:56
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answer #2
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answered by Larry454 7
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I think that he was working on two separate applications for his theories on relativity, which he modified from Newton's Physics (and others) Laws.
1) He worked on forward motions, which he developed his e=mc squared formula; and
2) He also was working on stabilizing structure frames for high speed travel in space, from Newton's Momentum Equilibrium and Conservation Postulates and Proof Theorems, which were abandoned by his financial backers shortly after his developments in splitting the atom and nuclear fusion possibilities.
I think that this unfinished work is what a lot of people are referencing about him having two brains, since these two applications of the basically same Laws of Physics are so wide apart.
The unfinished works of Einstein and his Fellow Physicists on the Momentum Theorems were completed with some working models built in 2005-2007, which proved the Newton Momentum Conservation Theorem could be added to structure frames, and with this addition, it has become possible to achieve Momentum Equilibrium of these frames to impacting forces on the frame, and in strengthening these frames to be able to withstand higher force impacts than current structure frames. In some ways, the perpetual "non-motion" machine, as these frames are so stabilized, and the materials to assemble these frames are long-lasting, durable, and can withstand multiple and repetitive impactings.
2007-12-30 19:02:29
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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He has a brain with two parts like a normal human being, he is known as the smartest guy 'cuz he had gone too far from what we are knowing now.
2007-12-30 15:34:11
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answer #4
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answered by Nai 4
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Yes, just like we all do. It's called a left hemisphere and a right hemisphere brain.
2007-12-30 15:14:21
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answer #5
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answered by Thomas E 7
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He just used both sides of his brain!
2007-12-30 15:38:17
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answer #6
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answered by conceptual1physics 1
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You never know with these scientist types.... who's to say he didn't have three brains?
2007-12-30 15:12:52
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answer #7
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answered by Roman Soldier 5
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No, though he did have an unusually shaped head/brain, and a very smart cousin who he may have plagerized.
2007-12-30 14:23:33
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answer #8
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answered by minuteblue 6
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