Lenard and Einstein: their Correspondence and their
Relationship before the Discussion of Bad Nauheim in
1912
The publication of Einsteins paper on the photoelectric
effect in 1905 brought him to Lenards attention. A brief
exchange of letters took place in which interpretations of
spectral lines and the photoelectric effect were discussed. These
letters and those from Einstein to Lenards assistant Jakob
Laub show that Lenard and Einstein possessed a high admiration
and respect for one another. Einstein called Lenard a great
master and genius; Lenard wanted to appoint a personality like
Einstein as a professor in Heidelberg as late as 1913.
The relationship between the two physicists took a turn for the
worse when Lenard began studying the theory of relativity. In
1910 he defended the concept of ether in a lecture which Einstein
characterized as infantile. After 1917 he opposed the general
theory of relativity. In 1918 he published his objections in a
treatise On the Principle of Rela- tivity, Ether, and
Gravitation. At that time Lenard still accepted the special
theory of relativity and wanted only to modify the general theory
in part. Einstein answered Lenards objections, Lenard
responded anew, and in these publications the personal side of
the conflict moved more and more into the foreground. The final
break came in 1920 when a certain Paul Weyland organized an
antisemitic campaign against Einstein and his physics in Berlin in
which Lenards name was used. From Lenards
correspondence with Stark and Gehrcke it is evident that Weyland
had misused Lenards name. Einstein, who did not know this,
attacked Lenard in a newspaper article. Lenard was deeply wounded
and demanded a public apology. An attempt by Sommerfeld to
reconcile the two colleagues ended with a failure. In September
1920, Einstein and Lenard squared off during a heated discussion
in Bad Nauheim, and from then on Lenards personal antisemitism
played an increasingly central role in his opposition to the
theory of relativity and its founder.
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