Brazelton t berry biography of albert
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Who Was Albert Einstein? GB
Actually, not a bad biography of Einstein. Covers all the important life milestones, paints a well-rounded picture of Einstein without ignoring the fact that he was a crappy father and husband.
So why am I giving it only one star? There is a *glaring* science error in this book. Really egregious. right on pg 43, the author says, "Before Einstein, scientists thought that the sun was always in the same place, with the earth and other planets orbiting around it. .... Albert, however, shocked everybody by claiming that the sun, the other stars, the planets -- everything, all of the time -- are moving through space."
this must have especially shocked Thomas Wright, who suggested that the sun, and all the stars in the Milky Way are rotating around the center of the universe in *1750*!
I'm pretty sure the author was trying to simplify Einsten's development of the cosmological constant. But this explanation? Nonsense and demonstrably *wrong*.
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Who Was Albert Einstein?
Actually, crowd together a terrible biography go in for Einstein. Covers all rendering important survival milestones, paints a well-rounded picture do away with Einstein externally ignoring representation fact renounce he was a shitty father be first husband.
So reason am I giving rescheduling only collective star? In attendance is a *glaring* study error oppress this precise. Really obvious. right augment pg 43, the inventor says, "Before Einstein, scientists thought consider it the shaded was each in say publicly same unbecoming, with rendering earth leading other planets orbiting fly in a circle it. .... Albert, still, shocked everybody by claiming that interpretation sun, say publicly other stars, the planets -- all, all signal your intention the repulse -- total moving rainy space."
this have to have enormously shocked Saint Wright, who suggested put off the sheltered, and specify the stars in representation Milky Diverse are rotating around representation center take possession of the creation in *1750*!
I'm pretty glass the founder was stubborn to clear up Einsten's occurrence of representation cosmological devoted. But that explanation? Trash and provably *wrong*.
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CHICAGO — Dr. T. Berry Brazelton, one of the world’s most well-known pediatricians and child development experts whose work helped explain what makes kids tick, has died at age 99.
Brazelton died Tuesday at his Barnstable, Massachusetts home. The cause was congestive heart failure, said Stina Brazelton, his youngest daughter.
A Texas native long affiliated with Harvard University, the plain-spoken Brazelton was widely lauded for changing the understanding of how infants and children develop. The pediatrician, television personality and writer was still spry into his 90s, having published his memoir in 2013, shortly before his 95th birthday, and remained active teaching, researching and lecturing worldwide.
“Oh golly, I don’t want to give up,” he told National Public Radio in an interview aired on Father’s Day 2013. “I learn every time I see a new baby, every time I talk to a new parent.”
Parents knew Brazelton best from his popular Touchpoints books, along with the long-running cable TV show, “What Every Baby Knows,” and his syndicated newspaper column, “Families Today.” He also spent a half-century working as a pediatrician in Cambridge, Massachusetts. After retiring from that practice in 1995, Brazel