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. Wellesley, Mass.: A. K. Peters.

Douglas, Vibert. 1956.

The Life of Arthur Stanley Eddington

. London: Thomas Nelson.

Dukas, Helen, and Banesh Hoffmann, eds. 1979.

Albert Einstein: The Human Side. New Glimpses from His Archives

. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Dyson, Freeman. 2003. “Clockwork Science.” (Review of Galison).

New York Review of Books

,Nov.6.

Earman, John. 1978.

World Enough and Space-Time

. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.

Earman, John, Clark Glymour, and Robert Rynasiewicz. 1982. “On Writing the History of Special Relativity.”

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2: 403–416.

Earman, John, et al., eds. 1993.

The Attraction of Gravitation: New Studies in the History of General Relativity

. Boston: Birkhauser.

Einstein, Albert. 1916.

Relativity: The Special and the General Theory

. (Written as a popular account, this book was published in German in December 1916. An authorized English translation was first published in 1920 by Methuen in London and Henry Holt in New York. It went through fifteen English-language editions in his lifetime, and he added appendixes up until 1952. It is available now from multiple publishers. The version I cite is the 1995 Random House edition. The book can be found at www.bartleby.com/173/and at www.gutenberg.org/etext/5001.)

———. 1922a.

The Meaning of Relativity

. Princeton: Princeton University Press. (A technical exposition based on his 1921 lectures at Princeton. The fifth edition, published in 1954, contains an appendix revising his attempt at a unified field theory. The 2005 edition from Princeton University Press contains an introduction by Brian Greene.)

———. 1922b.

Sidelights on Relativity

. New York: Dutton.

———. 1922c. “How I Created the Theory of Relativity.” Talk in Kyoto, Japan, Dec. 14. (I have used a new, corrected, and heretofore unpublished translation. Einstein’s Kyoto talk was published in Japanese in 1923 by theoretical physicist Jun Ishiwara, who was present and took notes. His version was translated into English by Yoshimasa A. Ono and published in

Physics Today

in August 1982. This translation, which has been used by most previous writers on Einstein, is flawed, especially in the parts where Einstein refers to the Michelson-Morley experiments; see Ryoichi Itagaki, “Einstein’s Kyoto Lecture,”

Science

magazine, vol. 283, March 5, 1999. A proper and corrected translation by Prof. Itagaki will appear in a forthcoming volume of CPAE. I am grateful to Gerald Holton for providing me with a copy of this translation. See also Seiya Abiko, “Einstein’s Kyoto Address,”

Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences

31 (2000): 1–35.)

———. 1934.

Essays in Science

. New York: Philosophical Library.

———. 1949a.

The World As I See It

. New York: Philosophical Library. (Based on

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