What god did Einstein believe in?

What god did Einstein believe in?​


Only a pathetic idiot would ask a question like this...
Albert Einstein spent considerable time explaining his religious views and his conception of nature's god, which was neither Christian nor Jewish.

So you are saying Albert Einstein was an idiot.
 
The momentum, velocity, trajectory of dice are completely deterministic and fixed by the physical laws of motion. The fact that we do not have perfect information about all the forces involved, or the computational power to describe it even if we did, is a problem of human deficit of knowledge. It's not a proof of a random and arbitrary universe.


The distribution of matter and energy in the universe is fixed by gravity, dark matter, and quantum fields.

The distribution of matter in the universe is not random and arbitrary.
Apparently your fucktarded ass wants some dirty sock lovings, and you're gonna get 'em because I'm just half-cocked enough to give you some You want to play the fuckety-fuck? I can play the fuckety fuck, 5X better than you.
 
Albert Einstein spent considerable time explaining his religious views and his conception of nature's god, which was neither Christian nor Jewish.

So you are saying Albert Einstein was an idiot.
Albert Einstein, who was a committed Jew, is once reported to have said, “I wish that I was not born a Jew, so that I could have the privilege of choosing Judaism (as a convert).”



Albert Einstein: A Highly Committed Jew by Heritage and Origin​

r the course of his lifetime, Einstein became a committed Jew and a Zionist, a commitment that resulted in his being offered the presidency of Israel, an honor that he declined. In 1955 he stated near the end of his life, “My relationship to the Jewish people has become my strongest human tie.” Einstein explained his route to Jewishness in his popular 1934 book, The World As I See It: “The pursuit of knowledge for its own sake, an almost fanatical love of justice, and the desire for personal independence – these are the features of the Jewish tradition which make me thank my stars that I belong to it.” He went on to note, “In the philosophical sense there is, in my opinion, no specific Jewish outlook. Judaism seems to me to be concerned almost exclusively with the moral attitude in life and to life.
 
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Albert Einstein, who was a committed Jew, is once reported to have said, “I wish that I was not born a Jew, so that I could have the privilege of choosing Judaism (as a convert).”



Albert Einstein: A Highly Committed Jew by Heritage and Origin​


r the course of his lifetime, Einstein became a committed Jew and a Zionist, a commitment that resulted in his being offered the presidency of Israel, an honor that he declined. In 1955 he stated near the end of his life, “My relationship to the Jewish people has become my strongest human tie.” Einstein explained his route to Jewishness in his popular 1934 book, The World As I See It: “The pursuit of knowledge for its own sake, an almost fanatical love of justice, and the desire for personal independence – these are the features of the Jewish tradition which make me thank my stars that I belong to it.” He went on to note, “In the philosophical sense there is, in my opinion, no specific Jewish outlook. Judaism seems to me to be concerned almost exclusively with the moral attitude in life and to life.
Cool.
 
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