Abstract

This article presents a brief review of some historical and philosophical aspects of Einstein’s 1917 paper ‘Cosmological Considerations in the General Theory of Relativity’, a landmark work that denotes the starting point of modern theoretical cosmology. Our presentation includes a discussion of Einstein’s early views of issues such as the relativity of inertia, the curvature of space and the cosmological constant. Particular attention is paid to lesser-known aspects of Einstein’s paper such as his failure to test his model against observation, his failure to consider the stability of the model and a slight mathematical confusion concerning the introduction of the cosmological constant term. Taken in conjunction with his later cosmological works, we find that Einstein’s approach to cosmology was characterized by a pragmatic search for the simplest model of the universe that was consistent with the principles of relativity and with contemporaneous astronomical observation.

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