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Eccentric physicist reveals the naked truth about East Hampton, his secrets of robust aging (or urging), why genius is easy yet comedy is hard, and how The Beatles resemble Albert Einstein. "Charming and clever." Morris Dickstein. "A gold mine." Isaac Asimov.

Produktbeschreibung
Eccentric physicist reveals the naked truth about East Hampton, his secrets of robust aging (or urging), why genius is easy yet comedy is hard, and how The Beatles resemble Albert Einstein. "Charming and clever." Morris Dickstein. "A gold mine." Isaac Asimov.
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Autorenporträt
Physicist Stephen Rosen learned relativity from Professor Banesh Hoffmann -- a colleague, collaborator and biographer of Albert Einstein. At the Institut d'Astrophysique in Paris and Centre d'Etudes Nucleaire in Saclay he was Visiting Scientist working on nuclear astrophysics and cosmic radiation. At Los Alamos and a prominent think tank during the cold war, he addressed issues of national defense and science policy. He helped 400 émigrés find employment. As a career counselor he helped a variety of individuals from different backgrounds find work by reviewing their resumes, preparing them for job interviews, developing contacts, and teaching them "network of not-work". Dr. Rosen's physics articles have appeared in science journals Physical Review, Nature, Nuovo Cimento; his op-ed and popular essays appear in the New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The East Hampton Star. His best-selling book Future Facts (S&S: 80,000 copies) is listed as one of 100 important books of the 20th century. Nobel Laureate Roald Hoffmann said his book, Career Renewal (co-authored with his wife Celia Paul) "is the ultimate self-help manual for the intelligent job seeker". After a recent stroke, he wrote: Youth, Middle-Age, and You-Look-Great! Dying To Come Back As A Memoir.