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  1. Albert Einstein, 1921. Albert Einstein's religious views have been widely studied and often misunderstood. Albert Einstein stated "I believe in Spinoza's God". He did not believe in a personal God who concerns himself with fates and actions of human beings, a view which he described as naïve.

  2. Oct 26, 2017 · Einstein was a complex man with complex views which are not always easy to understand. However, the belief that he followed Christianity, Judaism, or any religion, is baseless.

  3. Dec 4, 2018 · His cosmic religion and distant deistic God of cosmic order and elegance fits neither the agenda of religious believers or that of tribal atheists. As so often during his life, he refused and disturbed the accepted categories.

  4. Dec 2, 2018 · The God letter, written the year before Einstein’s death, seems to outline Einstein’s view of formal religion and the idea of a God who plays an active part in everyday life, answering ...

  5. Albert Einstein was born to a Jewish family and always identified as a Jew. However, he was a cultural Jew, not a religious Jew. Like many Jewish people, Einstein rejected the tenets of the faith of Judaism but identified with the Jewish people as his “tribe.”.

  6. Childhood, youth and education. Einstein in 1882, age 3. Albert Einstein was born in Ulm, [19] in the Kingdom of Württemberg in the German Empire, on 14 March 1879. [20] [21] His parents, secular Ashkenazi Jews, were Hermann Einstein, a salesman and engineer, and Pauline Koch.

  7. Einstein and Religion: Physics and Theology (1999) is a book on the religious views of Nobel prize-winning physicist Albert Einstein by Max Jammer, published by Princeton University Press. [1] [2] Contents [ edit ]

  8. Dec 25, 2018 · He regarded organized religion as a superstition, but he believed that, by means of scientific inquiry, a person might gain an insight into the exquisite rationality of the world’s structure, and...

  9. Einstein was a deeply religious individual and wrote extensively about the philosophy of religion. Although he was born a Jew, his family was not particularly observant, choosing not to follow traditional dietary laws or attend religious services.

  10. Dec 11, 2018 · Albert Einstein’s single most famous letter on God, his Jewish identity, and man’s eternal search for meaning — offered at Christie’s in December 2018