Sunday, 4 October 2015

Miracle of Albert Einstein Brilliant Brain

Albert Einstein was by all  measures a certifiable genius. He was a German-born Nobel prize-winning physicist, “father of the atomic  bomb,... thumbnail 1 summary
Albert Einstein was by all  measures a certifiable genius. He was a German-born Nobel prize-winning physicist, “father of the atomic  bomb,” and one of the most well-known philosophers that  science has ever seen. His contributions to society extend further than most legacies, but the abilities  of his brain remain a mystery.


Albert Einstein in Memories
By the time he was 17, he was  enrolled in a mathematics and teaching program. In his 20s, he created the theory of relativity, which  explained the nature of space, time, light, energy, and  gravity. So it’s no surprise when he died, the medical community wanted to know: What made his brain  so different from the rest of ours? Was one section of his  brain larger, smaller, more developed, or efficient than normal?

April 18 will mark 60 years since  Einstein’s death in Princeton, N.J., and the start of a strange series of events to follow. He was  76 at the time of his death, but his brain continued on for decades  afterward, where it was prodded, poked, photographed, sliced, and mailed around the world.

The Curious Quest of  Einstein’s Brain
What happened to his brain? Einstein  didn’t want his brain studied. In fact, he left specific instructions for his remains to be cremated and the ashes scattered secretly to avoid being  worshipped at his resting ground. Dr. Thomas S. Harvey, the lead pathologist at Princeton Hospital disregarded Einstein  and his family’s wishes the day he performed the  autopsy. The same morning Einstein died, Harvey secretly removed his brain, kept it, and gave the body back for  cremation without a word to the family.

Harvey eventually convinced  Einstein’s reluctant son to let him keep the brain “in the interest of science.” Behind closed doors Harvey examined  and photographed every inch of the brain but  was soon fired from Princeton because he wouldn’t give the brain back. That’s when he made an irreversible  decision and ran. He had the genius brain cut up into 240  cubed pieces, which he stored in two mason jars in his basement. For the next four decades, Harvey kept the brain and sent photographed copies and even pieces  of the brain to doctors and researchers he deemed worthy enough to have a look.

Over the years, six peer-reviewed publications  surfaced with various conclusions on the range of abilities and benefits his brain had on the  average person. They believe certain sections had higher density of  neurons than others and a greater ratio of cells that help neurons transmit messages to other parts. He also had a very thick corpus callosum, which are a bundle of  brain fibers that are used to communicate from one side of the brain to the other. It was true: His brain had unusual qualities, with extra folds, denser neurons, and  developed nodes, but today no one can be certain because of the damage done  by Harvey.
Different of brilliant brain and ordinary brain #BRILLIANT


We’ll never really know how to get a  brain like Einstein himself, except for one trick — play an instrument. Einstein was an excellent  violinist, even as a young child after being raised by a pianist  for a mother. Musicians have highly developed communication lines between the left and right hemisphere of their brain, just like Einstein. However, a person must  being learning an instrument before the age of 11 in order for the brain to develop this  special muscle. When Einstein had a difficult time with a math or physics problem, he was known for picking up his violin and playing until he worked the problem out in his head.

Einstein’s brilliant brain  was created with a combination of nature and nurture, but science will fail to truly understand the magnitude of  its unique abilities. It’s true, Harvey did seek  out other researchers to help him unravel the structural abnormalities that could have given Einstein  an advantage, but he failed in the approach. After traveling  cross country with a reporter and the brain in his trunk in the early 1990s, the story was finally  released into the world. Einstein’s brain was removed  from Harvey’s possession and now remains at the pathology lab where it started, along with a “hands off” policy.

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