Einstein's
letter makes
view of religion
relatively clear
By James
Randerson,
science
correspondent
13/05/08 "The
Guardian' -- -
"Science without
religion is
lame, religion
without science
is blind." So
said Albert
Einstein, and
his famous
aphorism has
been the source
of endless
debate between
believers and
non-believers
wanting to claim
the greatest
scientist of the
20th century as
their own.
A little known
letter written
by him, however,
may help to
settle the
argument - or at
least provoke
further
controversy
about his views.
Due to be
auctioned this
week in London
after being in a
private
collection for
more than 50
years, the
document leaves
no doubt that
the theoretical
physicist was no
supporter of
religious
beliefs, which
he regarded as
"childish
superstitions".
Einstein penned
the letter on
January 3 1954
to the
philosopher Eric
Gutkind who had
sent him a copy
of his book
Choose Life: The
Biblical Call to
Revolt. The
letter went on
public sale a
year later and
has remained in
private hands
ever since.
In the letter,
he states: "The
word god is for
me nothing more
than the
expression and
product of human
weaknesses, the
Bible a
collection of
honourable, but
still primitive
legends which
are nevertheless
pretty childish.
No
interpretation
no matter how
subtle can (for
me) change
this."
Einstein, who
was Jewish and
who declined an
offer to be the
state of
Israel's second
president, also
rejected the
idea that the
Jews are God's
favoured people.
"For me the
Jewish religion
like all others
is an
incarnation of
the most
childish
superstitions.
And the Jewish
people to whom I
gladly belong
and with whose
mentality I have
a deep affinity
have no
different
quality for me
than all other
people. As far
as my experience
goes, they are
no better than
other human
groups, although
they are
protected from
the worst
cancers by a
lack of power.
Otherwise I
cannot see
anything
'chosen' about
them."
The letter will
go on sale at
Bloomsbury
Auctions in
Mayfair on
Thursday and is
expected to
fetch up to
£8,000. The
handwritten
piece, in
German, is not
listed in the
source material
of the most
authoritative
academic text on
the subject, Max
Jammer's book
Einstein and
Religion.
One of the
country's
leading experts
on the
scientist, John
Brooke of Oxford
University,
admitted he had
not heard of it.
Einstein is best
known for his
theories of
relativity and
for the famous
E=mc2 equation
that describes
the equivalence
of mass and
energy, but his
thoughts on
religion have
long attracted
conjecture.
His parents were
not religious
but he attended
a Catholic
primary school
and at the same
time received
private tuition
in Judaism. This
prompted what he
later called,
his "religious
paradise of
youth", during
which he
observed
religious rules
such as not
eating pork.
This did not
last long though
and by 12 he was
questioning the
truth of many
biblical
stories.
"The consequence
was a positively
fanatic [orgy
of] freethinking
coupled with the
impression that
youth is being
deceived by the
state through
lies; it was a
crushing
impression," he
later wrote.
In his later
years he
referred to a
"cosmic
religious
feeling" that
permeated and
sustained his
scientific work.
In 1954, a year
before his
death, he spoke
of wishing to
"experience the
universe as a
single cosmic
whole". He was
also fond of
using religious
flourishes, in
1926 declaring
that "He [God]
does not throw
dice" when
referring to
randomness
thrown up by
quantum theory.
His position on
God has been
widely
misrepresented
by people on
both sides of
the
atheism/religion
divide but he
always resisted
easy
stereotyping on
the subject.
"Like other
great scientists
he does not fit
the boxes in
which popular
polemicists like
to pigeonhole
him," said
Brooke. "It is
clear for
example that he
had respect for
the religious
values enshrined
within Judaic
and Christian
traditions ...
but what he
understood by
religion was
something far
more subtle than
what is usually
meant by the
word in popular
discussion."
Despite his
categorical
rejection of
conventional
religion, Brooke
said that
Einstein became
angry when his
views were
appropriated by
evangelists for
atheism. He was
offended by
their lack of
humility and
once wrote. "The
eternal mystery
of the world is
its
comprehensibility."
