Wednesday 25 October 2017

Einstein’s theory of happiness sold for $1.5m

Gal Winner, owner and manager of the Winner's auction house in Jerusalem, displays two notes written by Albert Einstein, in 1922, on hotel stationary from the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo (22 October 2017)
The two notes sold for $1.56m and $240,000 - way higher than their estimates
Advice on two notes written by Albert Einstein describing his theory for happy living has sold at an auction house in Jerusalem for $1.56m (£1.19m).
The Nobel Prize-winning German-born physicist gave the notes to a courier in Tokyo in 1922 instead of a tip.
He told the messenger that if he was lucky, the notes would become valuable.
Einstein devoted his life to science but suggested in the notes that achieving a long-dreamt-of goal did not necessarily guarantee happiness.

When the courier came to his room to make a delivery, the physicist did not have any money to reward him.
German-born Swiss-US physicist Albert Einstein in Princeton (14 February 1950)
Einstein (seen here in 1950) wrote the hotel notes shortly after winning the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics
He had at the time just heard that he had won the Nobel Prize for physics and was in Japan on a lecture tour.
Instead, he handed the messenger a signed note - using stationery of the Imperial Hotel Tokyo - with one sentence, written in German: "A calm and humble life will bring more happiness than the pursuit of success and the constant restlessness that comes with it.
A second note written at the same time simply reads: "Where there's a will, there's a way." It sold for $240,000, Winner's auction house said.
The winning bids for both notes were far higher than the pre-auction estimated price, the auctioneers said.
It said the buyer of one of the notes was a European who wished to remain anonymous.
The seller is reported to be the nephew of the messenger.

Albert's advice: Other famous examples

We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them
The true sign of intelligence is not knowledge but imagination
We still do not know one thousandth of one percent of what nature has revealed to us
When you are courting a nice girl an hour seems like a second. When you sit on a red-hot cinder a second seems like an hour. That's relativity.

Source: BBCNews