GameOver22 said:
There is a difference between saying there is no God and saying there is no personal God. Most of the quotes from Einstein are criticisms against a personal God who intervenes in human life. A person who believed in a non-personal God, such as a deist or a pantheist, would not confront these problems. Given that Einstein says he accepts Spinoza's God (Spinozism is the best example of pantheism), it could be said that he believed in God. He just did not believe in a personal or religious God. The problem I have with scientists talking about their belief in God is that it is sometimes difficult to tell when they are using God as a metaphor and when they truly mean God. In Einstein's case, I could easily see someone arguing that he used God as a metaphor for the orderly structure of the universe. Personally, I find Einstein's views on God to be ambiguous. |
@GameOver22 Agreed. I didn't say he believed in a Christian God or a Muslim God or any other religious God. He just acknowleged a "Spirit" greater than humankinds. You can believe that Spirit is whatever you want. It's not a lie. I just pulled a few Einstein quotes. I'm out of here. Have fun.
"Some of you are thinking that you won't fight. Others, that you can't fight. They all say that, until they're out there."
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