The brain of Einstein's genius will be displayed

The public will have the opportunity to admire the brain of Albert Einstein, who is considered the greatest scientist in the 20th century, at an American museum.

The public will have the opportunity to admire the brain of Albert Einstein, who is considered the greatest scientist in the 20th century, at an American museum.

Einstein's 46 brain slices will be displayed in the Mutter Medical Museum in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA for 9 working days. Anna Dhody, an expert of the museum, said that the exhibition time has not been fixed, but the event will take place in the near future. Visitors can see 45 slices of Einstein's brain with the naked eye. But a slice was so small that people had to look through the microscope, Livescience said.

Picture 1 of The brain of Einstein's genius will be displayed

'Einstein is a unique individual. Admiring the intellectual part of the great man is a great opportunity , 'Dhody said.

In addition to Einstein's brain, the Mutter Medical Museum also displayed a body part of many other famous figures in history - like a tumor of the late US President Glover Cleveland. But the main purpose of the exhibition, according to Dhody, is to help the public admire the appearance of a genius of a genius. Dhody emphasized that no one really understood how Einstein's brain structure played for his greatness.

Albert Einstein, born on March 14, 1879, is a German-Jewish American theoretical physicist. He is considered one of the most influential scientists of all time. Einstein is called the birth of modern physics. He received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1921 for his contributions to theoretical physics, particularly the discovery of the law of photovoltaics. America's Time magazine named him "The Man of the 20th Century".

The prominent physicist died on April 18, 1955 at Princeton Hospital (New Jersey state, USA). Exactly 7 hours after Einstein's death, pathologist Thomas Harvey cut his brain to preserve, in the hope that future development of neuroscience could explain why Einstein was so intelligent. so. Thomas realized that Einstein's brain had no special points. It shrinks with age and is even a bit smaller than most people.

Update 15 December 2018
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