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No, there have been numerous other signs of relativity, going all the way back to the unexpected aberration of the orbit of Mercury that Einstein was aware of. Eventually somebody would have noticed the gravitational deflection of the stars during eclipses, too, though it could have been decades before that happened. (Not because of technology, of course, which clearly existed in Einstein's day, though just barely, but simply because nobody might have noticed.) Einstein was definitely ahead of the curve, but wasn't running on zero data, even if we discount the purely mathematical issues, such as the inability to reconcile the lack of a reference frame in the Maxwell equations with the need for a reference frame for all other physics of the time. (It might be worth pointing out here that relativity itself was not a new concept; now when we say "relativity" we mean Einsteinian relativity, but there is also, for instance, "Galilean relativity". Relativity wasn't a surprise, it's just nobody could make it all work out properly without contradictions until Einstein.) I really recommend this online book: http://www.mathpages.com/rr/rrtoc.htm It is both a great (IMHO) introduction to relativity, Einsteinian and otherwise, and also has a lot about history of Einstein's theory and the general state of thought at the time. I do not mean to diminish Einstein's accomplishment, because like I said he legitimately was ahead of the curve, but it wasn't quite the "bolt from the blue" that it is often portrayed as. All the math pieces Einstein needed had been developed, and his genius was largely the combination of figuring out how to put them together in a way that explained reality, and doing so while discarding inappropriate assumptions that were holding back the physics community at large. I'm actually more impressed by the latter, lest you think I'm trying to diminish that accomplishment; that's a hard harder than that sentence may make it sound. |