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#1
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A lot of you have probably been hearing the 'buzz' about the disappearing bees. Almost every news story prints a quote attributed to Albert Einstein. The quote goes: "If the bee disappeared off the surface of the globe, then man would only have four years of life left."
I was reading DailyKos and some commenter said that Einstein did not make that quote which I'm inclined to believe. So I googled the phrase and couldn't find anything to say where it came from. I searched google groups and couldn't find any post before 2002. Since Usenet groups go way back I figured someone would have quoted it before 2002. Here is a link to the oldest story I could find with the quote: http://www.cyberbee.net/news/mites.htm Does anyone know if Einstein actually said this (I don't think he did) or who actually first said this? I can guess why someone would falsely attribute the quote to Einstein. Because it would carry more weight. I did find one quote that I think can be reasonably attributed to him about bees http://www.monthlyreview.org/598einst.htm: "It is evident, therefore, that the dependence of the individual upon society is a fact of nature which cannot be abolished—just as in the case of ants and bees." |
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#2
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There's nary an entry in The New Quotable Einstein that mentions the word "bees." The closet match is a 1922 statement that referenced beetles:
"When a blind beetle crawls over the surface of a curved branch, it doesn't notice that the track it has covered is indeed curved. I was lucky enough to notice what the beetle didn't notice." - snopes |
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#3
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A blogger tried to find the source. Einstein quote. He traced it to an article in a German Journal. [Elsewhere, you can find the original quote in a translation of an articel in Der Speigel. Are GM Crops Killing Bees?. The German is
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******************* Kathy B. The Plural of anecdote is not data |
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#4
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Quoted in The Independent in England
"The implications of the spread are alarming. Most of the world's crops depend on pollination by bees. Albert Einstein once said that if the bees disappeared, "man would have only four years of life left"." I really don't think he said this, and it is spreading like wildfire with this bee situation. |
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#5
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Perhaps a French snopester (or at least someone who writes well in French) wouldn't mind contacting somebody at the Union Nationale de l'Apiculture Française (see "Contacts") and inquiring about the origin of this quotation, which the UNAF has been toting around for more than a decade.
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Last edited by Bonnie; 16 April 2007 at 12:01 AM. |
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#6
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BBC Radio 2 is quoting it today. No change there then. I'm convinced that 99% of the stuff they spout out on that station is urban legends.
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My Website|My Blog|My Facebook "As usual, the hard work of scientists gets smashed like a firefly butt on newsprint, creating a briefly luminescent glow and a total mess of the firefly." - ganzfeld |
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#7
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I googled the German quote KathyB found, but all it gave me were several versions of "like Einstein said", with no cite apart from citing news-outlets that gave no cite themselves.
Don Enrico
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My spelling is Wobbly. It's good spelling, but it Wobbles, and the letters get in the wrong places. - Pooh Bear |
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#8
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No offense to Einstein, but he wasn't an entomologist or an ecologist. Even if he did say that, it doesn't prove that the statement is accurate.
Bees are very important pollinators, but they are not the only ones. Other insects can and will continue pollinating flowers even if honeybees disappear. |
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#9
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Don "'Believe him, he's telling the truth!- A. Einstein" Enrico
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My spelling is Wobbly. It's good spelling, but it Wobbles, and the letters get in the wrong places. - Pooh Bear |
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#10
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Well, the other day hen I posted here, I emailed, the man who put the quote in his paper back in 2003. I asked him where he found the quote and he said he found it in a book of Einstein quotes and that the full quote is as follows:
"Wenn die Biene von der Erde verschwindet, dann hat der Mensch nur noch vier Jahre zu leben. Keine Bienen mehr, keine Bestäubung mehr, keine Pflanzen mehr, keine Tiere mehr, keine Menschen mehr." He suggested I google the quote for sources. I don't speak German, but what I found mostly seemed to be recent blog postings regarding the bee die off, and this: http://www.herd-und-hof.de/index/cmd...ow/20/search// which I had a friend who speaks German look over and she says that it questions the quote and believes it was invented for political gain, but they don't know where it originated. If anyone can do a better interpreting job, please do so. I emailed back the paper's author to ask him for the name of the book and told him I'd like to quote him here regarding it. He hasn't replied as of yet. I believe he's telling the truth that he found the quote in a book, but I'd be very interested in finding out the name of it, since I'm not finding this anywhere else. I also emailed the proprietor of an Einstein website, but I have not heard back from him either. |
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#11
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The website seems to belong to an agricultural publishing house and looks rather trustworthy to me. The relevant part of the article you linked is:
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Herd-und-Hof.de asked four international research establishments and one association whether they knew the quote, had used it before and had a cite. Not all of them did answer, but the outcome is clear: Everybody knows the quote, it may be used "for political reasons" sometimes, but everybody doubts that it originates from Einstein. The authors of the answers had even tried to "nail down" the quote by searching different archives. From "largely closed archives" to the latest book on Einstein quotes no cite was found that the physicist ever said something like that. According to that, we can positivly state the the quote in the OP isn't from Einstein. Don Enrico
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My spelling is Wobbly. It's good spelling, but it Wobbles, and the letters get in the wrong places. - Pooh Bear |
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#12
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Discovery Channel Europe is currently using it in one of their TV ads as well.
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#13
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Did anyone see Bill Maher's New Rules this week? He spoke about it.
The clip's not up yet, but I'll have a look.
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Because the streets is a short stop... either you're slingin crack rock or you got a wicked jumpshot... Work blog, personal blog. |
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#14
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I did. He cited Einstein and completely overlooked the role other animals play in pollination
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#15
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A fungus that caused widespread loss of bee colonies in Europe and Asia may be playing a crucial role in the mysterious phenomenon known as Colony Collapse Disorder that is now wiping out bees across the U.S.
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/ar...927458130.html |
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#16
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http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20070106/bob9.asp
"At least 75 percent of the 4,500 bee species in the United States and Canada live solitary lives." "They may offer alternatives to honeybees as pollinators for crops. And research is starting to reveal their importance in the wild." So, no made who made that quote I think we will live longer than 4 years after the death of honeybees. |
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#17
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- snopes |
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#18
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Even then, there are many other species of insects and other animals that act as plant pollinators. |
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#19
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#20
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As Einstein said, "Hairdressers are unnecessary."
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"You does not need none cigarette, it is abundance of smokin ' above inside" ~~~Ai am in mai prrraime!~~~ |
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