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He spent the last years of his life trying to prove this; he couldn’t do it, due to chaos theory. Was he right? Is the fact we cannot prove his ‘order theory’ down to lack of scientific understanding or is it all down to chaos?

2007-03-06 09:31:06 · 21 answers · asked by Good Egg 6 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

Ok ed but all chino has done is repeat my question, there has been no one, so far, who has even come close to answering the question that was asked

2007-03-06 09:59:01 · update #1

21 answers

No, he didn't believe in "God". You must be taking his quotes out of context.

2007-03-06 09:34:29 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 3 2

Anyone can now verify the existence of God on their own central nervous system. [Main reason why the media don’t tell you this is that they can’t make any money out of it and they would have to tidy up their act completely].

Within every human being there is a residual dormant energy that lies at the base of the spine in the Sacrum bone. (Sacrum – Greek meaning Sacred). When awakened it passes up the spinal column and pierces the fontanel bone (at the top of the head, soft spot on babies). It then manifests as a cool breeze on the hands and head when the subtle system is in balance. The individual may then ask any fundamental question and if it is true the flow of coolness increases if it is false they stop or become hot.
With practise you can then verify if a news report on TV or in newspapers is true or not. More importantly if there is God or that Jesus was the Son of God. The very expression that we use when something is good, “cool” has come from the collective unconscious.

The process that triggers this step is called self realisation and this is exactly what occurred to Lord Buddha, he became an enlightened being which enabled his attention to reach more sublime insights into life. So one can see it is not exclusively Christian.

As it is a living process no belief is required and there is no money to pay, but one must approach the phenomenon with an open mind and then like a scientist evaluate the results with total honesty. If one chooses to forgo the opportunity that is also your right it is not something that can be forced upon anyone.

This process can be achieved easily and most major cities now have local centres where one can experience the phenomenon.

2007-03-11 13:07:37 · answer #2 · answered by Cool Breeze 2 · 0 1

My friend Egg, Einstein was a JEW, every Jew has a background belief in GOD.
Like Einstein, I too believe that God does every thing well !

This is an ordered Universe and Just like you cannot prove that wind exists, or even explain wind in terms that the limited human mind can comprehend it, so God exists !

We know that He exists because of the relationship that we have with Him. Relationship being the experiences which we have day to day in our daily lives that speak to our very souls.

Have you ever asked yourself why you exist? Have you ever had an experience in your life which you can't explain?
Have you ever read the word of God (The Bible)?
What do you believe in?

This theory of chaos.. where did it come from? Ever heard of Satan, even he is a believer in God.. he is the origin of this chaos theory .. that is all he causes!

Anyway mate what I am saying is this if you believe in God then you will agree with me that the universe is ordered. If you need proof all you have to look to is God for the answer!

2007-03-13 03:11:08 · answer #3 · answered by Ragga 1 · 0 0

I think Einstein believed in God (whatever he called IT is immaterial) but he probably did not associate with any particular religion.

You are right in thinking that towards the end of his life, there was a spiritual force that was driving him; this force pushed him to try to discover God through what he knew best: physics and mathematics. If he had succeeded, a new religion would have been born.

2007-03-13 01:41:25 · answer #4 · answered by RAFIU 4 · 0 0

Quote from Einstein.

It was, of course, a lie what you read about my religious convictions, a lie which is being systematically repeated. I do not believe in a personal God and I have never denied this but have expressed it clearly. If something is in me which can be called religious then it is the unbounded admiration for the structure of the world so far as our science can reveal it.

-- Albert Einstein, 1954, from Albert Einstein: The Human Side, edited by Helen Dukas and Banesh Hoffman, Princeton University Press

2007-03-06 09:35:21 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 5 1

No, it's not lack of understanding. It's experimental fact.

Don't believe me? Just look up the two slits effect.

By the way, it's all down to 'quantum theory'.

Chaos is a very different thing.

2007-03-06 09:35:28 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

Everybody was tempted by the heart of Jesus, it got so hectic that he had to stand back. Theres alays been a chaos of what values reign in the heart(jerusalem) and thats why Jesus was subjected to spiritual bondage. Once you saw Jesus and the next you didn't, as the words were kept with his mother, this would have led to a great deal of confusion within the heart of Jesus due to the conflict of interest, this is when he got shipwrecked. ??????????

Many in the earthly realm want everybody to remain in the earthly realm. Many see nothing beyond the flesh.

2007-03-11 11:31:47 · answer #7 · answered by Paul B 2 · 0 1

Albert Einstein replaced right into a pantheist. He thought that "God = Universe", not something extra not something much less. each and every declare he created from "God" might contradict a minimum of ninety% of each and every monotheistic thought (and each and each polytheistic thought) of "God". to make sparkling: Einstein's "God" replaced into completely redundant, did not require any worship, made no ethical claims, and wasn't even unsleeping interior of any significant experience. -- and because it style of feels to require being stated: He replaced into of the Jewish race, not the Jewish faith (a minimum of not as quickly as he commonly used his very own opinions of God). the two are diverse.

2016-10-17 10:31:32 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

He thought there must be a creator due to the cosmos, but religion isn't a quantitative science therefore how can you prove it using maths, physics, chemistry or biology?

2007-03-12 03:36:20 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Einsein might have believed in God, but in the context all othe physicists do.

He did not really believe the bible. He believed in an ordered universe, but not because of God.

That was why he said "God does not play dice."

2007-03-08 22:44:39 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

There's lots of evidence in science to support the theory that there's a god, but none if it is proof, because we don't fundamentally understand a few key things about reality. If we could know once and for all that this universe is the only one there is and the only one there ever was, then what we know about science (and 6 or 7 key numbers in particular) makes it seem overwhelmingly likely that there IS a god. However, if there is (or was) more than just this universe, than God is anyone's guess, and only God himself knows whether or not he really exists.
If you're curious about the 6 or 7 key numbers, email me.

2007-03-06 09:36:19 · answer #11 · answered by Dim 2 · 0 5

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