Walter Isaacson.pdf - Einstein- His Life And Universe By
The book is equally conscientious about Einstein the person. Isaacson does not exempt his subject from moral scrutiny. He records Einstein’s fraught private life — the emotional distance from his first wife, Mileva Marić, and the ethically ambiguous episode in which he withheld paternity news from his son Eduard’s caretakers — not to sensationalize but to complicate the textbook hero. This decision matters: it resists the common tendency to conflate scientific accomplishment with moral authority. Isaacson’s editorial stance is that scientific reputation should not be a cloak for private conduct; acknowledging contradiction makes the scientific achievements more human and, paradoxically, more admirable.
