On April 17, 1955, I started feeling chest pains and I went to the Princeton Hospital. I died early the next morning in my sleep leaving the Generalized Theory of Gravitation unsolved. My body was cremated, and my ashes were scattered in an undisclosed location. Before the cremation, however, my brain was saved by Dr. Thomas Harvey, a pathologist at the hospital who wanted to know what it was that made me a genius. He performed an autopsy on my brain but he found nothing unusual. In 1999 however a team at McMaster University revealed that my parietal operculum region was missing and, to compensate, my inferior parietal lobe was 15% wider than normal. The inferior parietal region is responsible for mathematical thought, visuospatial cognition, and imagery of movement.
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