Does God exist? (Exista Dumnezeu?)
Uploader Comments (VashZaStampede)
Top Comments
-
Einstein wasn't a Christian. He didn't believe in the God of the Bible either. He believed in the God of nature, the God of balance. He said that the Universe was so beautiful, that it couldn't have came into existence by mere chance. So if you're getting the impression that Einstein was a God loving, Jesus following Christian, you're wrong.
Video Responses
All Comments (144)
-
Imi plac replicile :) sunt facute cu cap
-
mda si probabil ca a ramas corigent la materia aia , dar in fine einstein era pantheist(ceva legat de metafizica) , cea e mai aproape de ateu decat agnostic sau deist , ala din videoclip nu e einstein mah baieti si fete
-
@allexrap nu, lol. a ramas corigent pt k profesorii erau mai prosti k el si el se contrazicea cu ei, avand dreptate. De-aia a ramas corigent;)
-
Defapt nu a ramas corigent...acest lucru fiind imfirmat chiar de el......asta este doar un zvon...
-
@lunaS41: YEAH!! THAT'S IT!! YOU ARE 10000000% CORRECT... Jesus didn't bring religion... If he did, then he would have mentioned it in his teachings. :)
-
very good reply!
-
As I recall Einstein was considered a fairly "unremarkable student" at school so I find that appraisal unlikely if he was wont to stand up in class and "school" his teachers in science etc.
-
Einstein did love God, and said that his job was to "trace the lines that flow from God". Furthermore, though he wasn't a Christian, he believed Jesus was one of the greatest moral teachers of all, and deeply praised him in a non-believer way.
-
faina asta cu Einstein :)
-
genius!
Another word from Albert Einstein:
"I cannot imagine a God who rewards and punishes the objects of his creation, whose purposes are modeled after our own--a God, in short, who is but a reflection of human frailty. Neither can I believe that the individual survives the death of his body, although feeble souls harbor such thoughts through fear or ridiculous egotism."
Albert Einstein - New York Times Nov. 9, 1930
So don't try to use him for your propaganda to bring religiousness back to schools.
stunhabter 2 years ago 45
That was in 1930. He died in 1955, so I'm thinking he could have changed his mind throughout time because he was a deep thinker, a seeker of truth, a brilliant mind ...and he was still searching for answers.
VashZaStampede 2 years ago
He never claimed to believe in a christian God or any other God bound to religion. But he stated 1929 that he believed in Spinozas God, which means that he might have been a deist.
stunhabter 2 years ago
So he wasn't atheistic at all. He was so amazed by the universe and all the laws and the complexe inteligence behind it, that it was imposibile for him to belive this world happened by "chance''.
VashZaStampede 2 years ago