dartagnan wrote:
Marg,This discussion is also about your claim that you share a similar God belief to what Einstein did. If we can not pin point what your belief is because of lack of information from you, then we are unable to agree with you that you share a similar God belief to Einstein.
Well, we both believe:
1. God exists
Einstein wrote in 1954 in a letter: " The word god is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weakness, the Bible a collection of honourable, but still primitive legends which are nevertheless pretty childish."
If he believed in a God ..why would he say it is "nothing more than an expression"? ..nothing more than a product of human weakness? Let's just say he believed in a creator, a non interfering sort/deist. if that was the sort of god he believed in why would he refer to God as being "nothing more than an expression" ? Why not explain what his particular god belief entailed?
2. God is responsible for writing the laws of the Universe.
The word God can be used metaphorically as whatever is responsible for particular laws of the universe, but that isn't a tacit acknowledgment of a thing or an actuality we call "God" existing as an actuality.
3. God is a superior reasoning power
Again "God" can be used in a metaphoric sense.
4. God is a spirit, not anthropomorphic.
The only problem with this is that Einstein would need to define "spirit" in order to understand what he meant, and of course I'd need to see the sentence he used it in and context.
by the way, Dawkins does use some quotes to illustrate Einstein wasn't a deist. 'God is subtle but he is not malicious' or 'He does not play dice' or Did God have a choice in creating the Universe' All those quotes are not from a deist.
Do yourself a favor and don't use Dawkins to tell you what Einstein believed. Dawkins is untrustworthy as that article proves.They could be from someone who believes in an interfering sort of God which I'll label theist, but we know Einstein didn't believe in that. So what is left?
Uh, a God that doesn't interfere?
Well Kevin..."God is subtle but he is not malicious" is about a God who does interfere with mankind, just not maliciously but subtly..that's why a person making such a statement is not making it as a deist, or as one who believes in a complete hands off in the affairs of mankind sort of God. So if Einstein isn't a deist as those quotes indicate, then he must believe in an interfering sort of God. Yet we know from other quotes he didn't believe in the god of religions, in an interfering sort of God. So there is a contradiction. And that contradiction can be explained by him using the word "God" in those quotes as a metaphor.
As to your beliefs, if you are a Christian you are not a deist. If you are a Christian you do not share similar God beliefs to Einstein.
by the way, one other point, you do not understand "atheism" fully. This has been explained to you previously many times and you refuse to acknowledge that the only thing common to all atheists is a lack of committed belief in a God. That is not saying that God does not exist or one has knowledge God does not exist. Hence I can appreciate why an atheist in the public eye might choose to refuse labels because of people such as yourself who jump to conclusions and misconstrue what is intended. Einstein from what I've read so far appears to have been non specific exactly what his god beliefs are, but he certainly didn't believe in a religious God and from that letter of 1954 doesn't even appear to think the word God is meaningful. If Einstein said flat out 'I believe in an intelligent being which created the universe..then you could say he was a deist' without a doubt. But he doesn't even go that far. Instead he says 'the word God is nothing more than an expression and a product of human weakness'. Let's assume he was non committal to the existence of any conception of a God...that would be the essential characteristic that all atheists share in common. Since he has been non committal to a clear acknowledgment of a creator which exists or existed as an entity, by default he is an atheist. That is an individual, who as an atheist, lacks committed belief in the existence of a creator as an actual entity, whatever man can conceive of that entity. If Einstein was a committed believer in a God he would have made that clear. The lack of clarity indicates he was not a theist.