Question:
What was the quote from Albert Einstein about energy being everlasting?
anonymous
2006-07-05 01:19:33 UTC
I believe it was something to do with humans having everlasting energy. When are bodies die we have energy that contiues on.
Seven answers:
ballerina_dancer017
2006-07-05 01:23:19 UTC
Do you mean the law of conservation of energy? That energy can neither be created nor destroyed. It simply transfers from one body to another. I suppose the same could be said of people?
I am rock
2006-07-06 05:30:31 UTC
The most memorable and most funny quote of Einstein was, "An hour seem like a minute when a man sits with a woman and a minute seem like an hour when the same man is made to sit on an oven”. This he said when he was explaining the theory of relativity.
lifhapnz
2006-07-05 01:29:31 UTC
I believe you are refering to the law of conservation. It states that energy and matter can neither be created nor destroyed, only transfered or transformed. Applied to humans you can say that we too are made up of both devine energy (our spirit, soul whatever you want to call what makes you, you) and matter (flesh). So in theory when you die your body transfers to the earth and your spirit is transformed possibly into something else.
?
2017-02-20 20:00:56 UTC
Einstein Quote Energy
lostinromania
2006-07-05 01:25:10 UTC
Not sure about that, but there is a physics law called "Law of Conservation of Energy". This law wasn't Einstein's though, I'll try to look up some metaphysical Einstein quotes.



http://www.spaceandmotion.com/Physics-Bohr-Einstein.htm



http://www.spaceandmotion.com/Wolff-Einstein-EPR-Experiment.htm



Hopefully you'll find what you're looking for there.
cherrijo79
2006-07-05 01:26:58 UTC
We are all made of what stars are made of. Down to the smallest building blocks of life. The universe is full nothing ever goes away it just changes from a dead carcas to fertalizer from wood to smoke from ice to water nothing escapes just recycles.
anonymous
2006-07-05 01:26:25 UTC
Check out



http://www.heartquotes.net/Einstein.html


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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