Einstein and “God”The debate over Science and Religion is like catnip for anyone wanting to spout off about the improbability of God or the arrogance of scientists. The public seems to have an insatiable appetite for this debate. Many of the current debates in science and religion turn on how we define certain key words, like “God”, “transcendence”, and “religion”. A great deal also rides on how much of reality we think can be explained by another loaded word, “science.”Take the case of Albert Einstein. He died more than half a century ago, but there’s a huge debate right now between religious believers and atheists over who gets to claim Einstein, the most famous scientist of the last century. Einstein himself made a number of provocative and rather cryptic comments about religion. He called himself “a deeply religious nonbeliever.”He said, “Science without religion is lame; religion without science is blind.”Most famously, he proclaimed, “God does not play dice with the universe.”Who is this God that Einstein invoked? Was he simply using the word “God”as a synonym for order and harmony in the universe?I have asked a number of scientists, theologians, and Einstein scholars, and I’ve heard many different responses. “Einstein clearly was an atheist(无神论者)in the sense that he didn’t believe in a personal God,”Richard Dawkins says. “He used the word God as a metaphoricname for that which we don’t yet understand, for the deep mysteries of the universe.”The Nobel Prize-winning physicist and fellow atheist Steven Weinberg believes Einstein was just using poetic language when he talked about religion, which Weinsberg considers a mistake. “Clearly, what Einstein meant by God is so vague and so far from conventional religion, it seems to me a misuse of the word,”Weinsberg says. “The concept of God historically has had a fairly definite meaning. God was conscious. God was powerful. God was benevolent to some extent. If you’re not going to use God to mean something like that, then you shouldn’t use the word.”Walter Isaacson, Einstein’s biographer, has a very different perspective. He claims that Einstein was a deist(自然神论信仰者)who knew exactly what he was doing when he talked about “God”and “religion.”When he was asked whether he was just using the word symbolically, he said, no, he wasn’t,”Isaacson told me. “He talked about having a cosmic religion. He thought there was a spirit manifesting in the laws of the universe, and that was his notion of God.”13. Which of the following is Not True according to the passage?