it goes without saying I copied it from there - - my bad for not linking
I frnkly dont get paid enough to get into pissing matches all day long
feel better ?
but of course that easily obfuscates the point of the post doesnt it - that was your intent wasnt it ?
Hmm, I would say that obfuscation was your intent in the original post, Revelation 911.
What was telling was the omissions. Adding to my earlier reply to your posting it should be noted that Einsteins quote that "God does not play dice" was that fact the Einstein was proven wrong.
Every single quote that you posted was full of omissions like that.
Actually, I read the entire post. It proved nothing.
Albert Einstein (1879-1955) Einstein is probably the best known and most highly revered scientist of the twentieth century, and is associated with major revolutions in our thinking about time, gravity, and the conversion of matter to energy (E=mc2). Although never coming to belief in a personal God, he recognized the impossibility of a non-created universe. The Encyclopedia Britannica says of him: "Firmly denying atheism, Einstein expressed a belief in "Spinoza's God who reveals himself in the harmony of what exists." This actually motivated his interest in science, as he once remarked to a young physicist: "I want to know how God created this world, I am not interested in this or that phenomenon, in the spectrum of this or that element. I want to know His thoughts, the rest are details." Einstein's famous epithet on the "uncertainty principle" was "God does not play dice" - and to him this was a real statement about a God in whom he believed. A famous saying of his was "Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind."
He certainly wouldn't have been accepted as a Christian, though the Unitarians might have given him a home.