Einstein's theory of happiness sells for $1.3M at auction | Inquirer News

Einstein’s theory of happiness sells for $1.3M at auction

/ 07:09 AM October 25, 2017

A picture taken on October 19, 2017, shows Gal Wiener, owner and manager of the Winner’s auction house in Jerusalem, displaying two notes written by Albert Einstein (inset), in 1922, on hotel stationary from the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo Japan. A note by Einstein on his theory of happiness sold for $1.3 million at auction in Jerusalem on Tuesday, Oct. 24, 2017. AFP

JERUSALEM — While Albert Einstein’s theory of happiness may be relative, it fetched $1.3 million at a Jerusalem auction on Tuesday.

The Nobel-winning scientist’s musings, on a handwritten note, may not be as famous as his groundbreaking theory of relativity, but they still shed light on one of the great modern minds.

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Winner’s Auctions and Exhibitions said Einstein was traveling in Japan in 1922 when he was told he would be awarded the Nobel Prize in physics. In Tokyo, Einstein scribbled the note in German to a bellboy after he did not have cash to give him a tip.

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“A calm and modest life brings more happiness than the pursuit of success combined with constant restlessness,” it reads.

Gal Wiener, CEO of the auction house, said Einstein told the bellboy that because of his fame, the handwritten note “will probably be worth more than a regular tip.”

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Wiener said bidding began at $2,000 and quickly escalated, with the bidding war lasting around 25 minutes.

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Another note Einstein gave the bellboy, which read “Where there’s a will there’s a way,” was sold for over $200,000, Wiener said.

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He would not identify the buyer or seller of either note.

Einstein was a founder of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and left it his literary estate and personal papers. He declined an invitation to serve as Israel’s first president. Einstein died in 1955. /cbb

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TAGS: bellboy, happiness, Jerusalem, News, Nobel Prize, physics

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