BTW, let me just say this and this will be the last I will say on this subject.
Many people are late bloomers. I know someone who was failing his classes in one semester then went on to become the first honor student the next. And no, he did not cheat. His teachers were so amazed. His mom could believe it. All his cousins couldn't believe it. He then went on to enroll in one of the top Electrical Engineering programs in one of the most prretigious Engineering school. It happens more than you think. That's just a fact of life. I just love these revisionist historians. Whatever is politically correct goes. Einstein did fail math when he was younger, but you won't find the truth googling, much like you won't find it in wikipedia. Jojo ----- Original Message ----- From: Jed Rothwell To: [email protected] Sent: Tuesday, July 29, 2014 11:14 AM Subject: Re: [Vo]:Is the SunCell a titanium burner? I did not notice this. Jojo Iznart <[email protected]> wrote: But didn't Edison have an incredibly lousy history before he perfected his lightbulb? Didn'tt Einstein fail high school algebra before he created the beautifully elegant language of Relativity mathematics? No, he did not fail high school algebra. He was brilliant in math his whole life. His only weak subject was foreign language -- French, as I recall. This is described in every biography of him. See, for example: http://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1936731_1936743_1936758,00.html Before you make assertions about famous people, you should read their biographies. Do some fact checking. I realize it is widely reported that Einstein was not good at math, but this is highly implausible. His work includes a lot of complicated, brilliant math. A person does not go from being a failure at math at 16 to being the best on earth at 26 (in 1905). Along similar lines, when Edison developed the lightbulb he did it with capital from some of the biggest, most famous bankers and capitalists in New York, including J. P. Morgan. He spent a ton of money. The first place he installed lights was lower Manhattan: Wall Street and the offices of the New York Times. His company evolved into General Electric. In other words, this was a big money, mainstream effort. Do you think J. P. Morgan would pour money into a project run someone who had been a failure up until then? - Jed

