Einsteins Science

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A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man: Correlations Between Einstein's Science and Joyce's Artist



Joyce and Einstein both made enormous contributions to their respective fields, but left us with as many new mysteries as answers to questions. Einstein's theory of Relativity showed us that our conceptual relationship to the world around us is extremely flexible -- that our perception of the world is determined both by our position in and of itself, and our position in relation to others. His theory of physics which had an immense impact on our epistemological endeavors, in that it imposes limits of what and how we can know due to our location …show more content…

Stephen becomes very taken with the notion of education, and he excels at it. His efforts put him at the head of his class in essay writing, although his skill at mathematics is weak. His education indoctrinates him with the structures of rationality in the liberal arts, and his religious education, as we are shown in the retreat episode, indoctrinates him with a passionate faith for a time. The One True Way of Irish Catholic Rationalism seems to be his calling, and yet, as we see from his forays with the prostitutes, it is insufficient for him -- clearly, he longs for a variety of experience that that path will not allow for. Even his repentance is driven more by his fear of damnation than by a genuine love of God. Stephen himself comes to a partial realization of this after his conversation with the priest about taking holy orders: Some instinct... Stronger than education or piety, quickened within him at every near approach to that life, an instinct subtle and hostile, and armed him against acquiescence. (p. 174)

What we see here are the early stirrings of Stephen's recognition of himself as an individual truly apart from the world in which he was raised, an intuitive belief that he is 'a being apart in every order' (p. 174). It also marks the beginning of Stephen's most drastic change …show more content…

It ascends from a tone of gray mundanity to one of more romantic and poetic vision, both of which have strong associations with the liberal fluidity of individual perceptions. Stephen also begins to see beauty in a new, more personal way. His earlier encounters with women, specifically those with prostitutes, did not allow him to appreciate the beauty of a woman, but rather were attempts to express himself as an individual in a system that frowned upon that notion. The descriptions of those encounters are fleeting and dry, implying far more than was actually said, and were, even before his 'repentance', a source of guilt and shame. But, once Stephen begins to assert his individuality, he is able to appreciate beauty according to his own aesthetic, as we see in his ecstatic description of the girl he sees wading in the stream (p. 185). he comes away from the experience regarding her as a 'wild angel.. of mortal youth and beauty.' (186) His later conversation about fire and beauty with the dean of studies, with Stephen quoting from Aquinas takes on a condescending and insincere tone when held up to this description. Stephen has already found his aesthetic, and the quote from Aquinas is a statement of compromise: 'Pulcra sunt quae visa placent' allows Stephen room enough for his individual vision, while sliding that fact past the dean in the guise of

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