We'll have to wait on that one
2006-11-10 15:52:14
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answer #1
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answered by Apeman 4
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Not sure what your particular angle is with including Einstein in this question, but the answer is no. Here is a quotation from him on his sense of religion:
"You will hardly find one among the profounder sort of scientific minds without a peculiar religious feeling of his own. But it is different from the religion of the naive man.
For the latter God is a being from whose care one hopes to benefit and whose punishment one fears; a sublimation of a feeling similar to that of a child for its father, a being to whom one stands to some extent in a personal relation, however deeply it may be tinged with awe.
But the scientist is possessed by the sense of universal causation. The future, to him, is every whit as necessary and determined as the past. There is nothing divine about morality, it is a purely human affair. His religious feeling takes the form of a rapturous amazement at the harmony of natural law, which reveals an intelligence of such superiority that, compared with it, all the systematic thinking and acting of human beings is an utterly insignificant reflection."
2006-11-10 15:52:19
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answer #2
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answered by braennvin2 5
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I think it is very difficult for an intellectual and a scientist to accept the fact that there is a God.
I think an intelligent man must ask questions and question life, earth, his purpose, his motivation, the duck bill platypus and why computers crash.
But when does one stop asking questions and be OK with the unknown?
For those without Christ and are "OK" with the unknown begin to analyze and question nothingness, and infinity.
But I'm sure when most intellectuals lives have come to a close they realize how little they really do know.
Faith is either part of your life or it isn't, I choose faith.
2006-11-10 16:10:25
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answer #3
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answered by wondering? 2
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Einstein became a Freethinker and a Scientist. He accounted how he rejected conventional religion on entering his teens. He gave up the idea of a personal God in favor of cultivating the Good, the True, and the Beautiful in humanity itself. Einstein denied the existence of an immortal soul.
2006-11-10 15:59:29
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answer #4
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answered by HSB 3
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Sunshine is authentic anybody can declare to be Christian , besides the undeniable fact that the time period honestly potential modelling your existence after Christ,in case you try this you'll understand not purely the straightforward issues yet also the deep issues about God, this in turn will reason you to evolve your existence to be in team spirit with the scriptures and hence your beliefs will be consistant There are a collection of such Christians, they're said as Jehovah''s witnesses. We count number on what the bible says and make the necessary adjustments if our movements are out of team spirit. as an example I havent continually been a Jehovah's witness and that i used to celebrate such traditions as christmas and easter after attending to renowned the origins of those traditions i realized that doing so replaced into out of team spirit with being a Christian, so i finished after I first began interpreting the bible i smoked cigarettes and heeps of weed, the further i studied the further i realized i might want to not do both and nonetheless please God so i finished smoking. regarding adjustments in beliefs save in recommendations there is purely one authentic God, Jehovah is his call and there is purely one truth, God's observe is the benchmark on which to degree those obtrusive adjustments. The trinity in my study isn't supported by the scriptures, many will disagree yet regarding truth we favor to make up our personal recommendations depending on the accessible information. ingesting alcohol isn't a sin contained in the Bible, even Jesus drank a touch besides the undeniable fact that Drunkenness is and there a many scriptures to help this statement. i wager what i'm alluding to is critiques are plenty like abdomen buttons, all of us have them, and the're all a touch diverse. yet truth, it doesn't replace , the issue is a few peoples idea of it does. yet when we base it on a strong source which incorporates Gods observe then we are progression on an infallible strong starting up, one it really is not continually transferring.
2016-11-29 00:40:47
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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No, he didn't believe in a "Christian God". However, he did believe deeply in God. Here is an excerpt from an interesting article.
In a recent book Max Jammer, Rector Emeritus of Bar Lan University in Jerusalem, a former colleague of Albert Einstein at Princeton, claims that Einstein's understanding of physics and his understanding of religion were profoundly bound together, for it seemed to Einstein that nature exhibited traces of God quite like "a natural theology." Indeed it is with the help of natural science that the thoughts of God may be tapped and grasped. 1 On the subject of Einstein and God Friedrich Dürrenmatt once said, "Einstein used to speak of God so often that I almost looked upon him as a disguised theologian." 2 I do not believe these references to God can be dismissed simply as a façon de parler, for God had a deep, if rather elusive, significance for Einstein which was not unimportant for his life and scientific activity. It indicated a deep-seated way of life and thought: "God" was not a theological mode of thought but rather the expression of a "lived faith" (eines gelebten Glaubens).
Albert Einstein was born in 1879 of secular Jewish parents who lived in Ulm and then in Munich, where he went to school. There in accordance with state law he had to be instructed in his faith; he was taught Judaism because of his ethnic heritage. By the age of twelve Einstein became deeply religious, combining ardent belief in God with a passion for the music of Mozart and Beethoven. He composed songs to the glory of God which he sang aloud to himself on his way to and from school.
Einstein regularly read the Bible, Old and New Testaments alike...
2006-11-10 15:56:24
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answer #6
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answered by Rico Toasterman JPA 7
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No. Einstein was a Deist. He believed in a distant and impartial God who created the Natural Law and set the universe into motion. This concept is sometimes called "The Unmoved Mover."
2006-11-10 15:49:41
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answer #7
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answered by Lucas L 1
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No,Einstein was a Jew.The 2nd part of your question/statement is answered in this way;It is not the fear of death,per sae,but fear of the unknown.Q:Can you conceive of total,absolute nothingness?If our centers our driving or life force are composed of energy,and energy can neither be created nor destroyed merely changed into something else,then we,our life force goes on forever.Where that force ends up is up to us(I hope)
2006-11-10 17:15:11
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answer #8
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answered by Sweet Willy 3
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He was Jewish so I tend to say no. He probably was Bar Mitzvahd and schooled in the traidtions.
Einstein did say of the Randomists: "God doesn't play craps!"
Based on what you are saying, if true and his other statements, he was probably like Jefferson, a Diest.
And Ghandi saying "the problem with Christianity is Christians" isn't putting the religion down...
2006-11-10 16:26:23
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Einstein believed in some kind of God, just not the Christian God.
Does gravity exist? You can't experience it with your five senses, yet we can observe its effects upon our reality. Is string-theory correct? If the graviton can escape to another dimesion, does it cease to exist. I think the problem is you fail to understand the true nature of our reality and how far we are confined to this space and time.
If you had a child and told him or her not to touch the stove, you obviously said so, not to be mean or vindictive or something, but for their well being. And if the child disobeys, will you not punish the child, not out of cruelty, but out your love for them? And if they continue to disobey you and turn from you for thier entire lives, will there not be call for seperation?
I think your problem is similar to a problem I used to have when I didn't believe in God: I limited God by bringing him (an infinitely wise creator God) down to my level of understanding and comprehension, when he far surpasses me in all things. As the Bible quotes God: "For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways," says Yahweh. "For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts.-Isa.55:8-9.
2006-11-10 16:02:44
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes he did say that he saw the world as being way to intricate and well put together and that it had to have some kind of meaning that he believed their had to be some kind of higher power..i wish i could remember the exact quote but it was alone those lines, as for it being christian no i cant remember anything amoung the line
2006-11-10 16:06:07
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answer #11
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answered by jennyve25 4
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