by Jeremy Hinsdale
In the coming months, you may experience strange urges to spend quality time with protractors, gaze up into the night sky and ponder the nature of the universe, or sidle up to a few thousand volts of static electricity emitting from a Van de Graaff generator just to make your hair stand on end.
Is this some kind of bizarre astrological prediction? No -- 2005 has been designated the World Year of Physics, and physicists, universities, and science-friendly organizations are celebrating with events from Aspen to Zurich.
![]() Albert Einstein |
This smorgasbord of events will no doubt evoke at least hazy memories of the profound ways Einstein transformed our conceptions of light, space, and time in even the most science-befuddled minds. But without the threat of a final exam, few people are likely to spend much time considering the ideological principles that informed Einstein's scientific description of the cosmos. Even these philosophical types might be surprised to discover that, although his radical ideas ushered in the era of modern physics, Einstein believed a deterministic universe lay beneath the mind-bending aspects of our physical world revealed by his theories. Moreover, his conviction about this overarching order makes Einstein an heir to the deeply rooted themes of positivism, unity, and determinism that run throughout the Western traditions of religion, philosophy, and science.
Einstein himself acknowledged that his work was built upon the bedrock of classical physics. As he put it in an April 1921 interview in THE NEW YORK TIMES, "There has been a false opinion widely spread among the general public that the theory of relativity is to be taken as differing radically from the previous developments in physics. ... The men who have laid the foundations of physics on which I have been able to construct my theory are Galileo, Newton, Maxwell and Lorentz."
![]() Sir Isaac Newton |
Newton also believed in a creator who had fashioned the laws of nature and set them in motion, but Einstein's belief system did not include the existence of a personal God. In his writings on religion, Einstein emphasized a "cosmic religious feeling," the essential beauty and mystery of the universe, and a metaphorical deity "who reveals himself in the orderly harmony of what exists." He tried repeatedly to explain his views, but they were often poorly understood and were by turns co-opted in support of or in opposition to different religious creeds. For example, in an attempt to defend Einstein's theory of relativity against the claim that it was atheistic, Rabbi Herbert S. Goldstein of the Institutional Synagogue in New York cabled the professor in 1929 and asked him to clarify his views on God. Einstein replied that he believed in a God who "reveals himself in the lawful harmony of the world, not in a God who concerns himself with the fate and the doings of mankind." The good rabbi somehow extrapolated from this brief sentence that "Einstein's theory, if carried out to its logical conclusions, would bring mankind a scientific formula for monotheism. He does away with all thought of dualism or pluralism. There can be no room for any aspect of polytheism."
Einstein himself called his theory "a purely scientific matter [that] has nothing to do with religion," and he ultimately rejected the trappings of traditional faith. But his pursuit of theoretical unity, belief in causality, and trust in a harmonious universe all echo the Western religious traditions. It was these principles that guided Einstein's quest for a "grand unified theory" to unite the disparate theories described by modern physics -- a task that consumed the latter part of the great scientist's life and remains the holy grail of physics today.
After abandoning the traditional religion of his youth, Einstein turned to Western philosophy; he later considered his readings in this area to have played an important part in the development of both his religious speculations and his physics. The most influential figure in his philosophical pantheon was the "God-intoxicated" 17th-century Dutch philosopher Baruch Spinoza. Einstein found a kindred spirit in this excommunicated Jew who devoted his life to quiet philosophical speculation, and in 1920 Einstein wrote a poem entitled "Zu Spinozas Ethik" (On Spinoza's Ethic). As translated in Max Jammer's EINSTEIN AND RELIGION (1999), it begins with the following lines:
How much do I love that noble man
More than I could tell with words
I fear though he'll remain alone
With a holy halo of his own.
![]() Baruch Spinoza |
Perhaps the most telling indication of Einstein's faith in a deterministic universe can be found not in what he himself believed but in the rival physics theory he refuted: quantum mechanics. The work of a prominent group of early 20th-century physicists that included Niels Bohr, Werner Heisenberg, and Wolfgang Pauli, quantum mechanics crystallized during roughly the same period as Einstein's own work. Ironically, Einstein's 1905 explanation of the photoelectric effect, for which he won the Nobel Prize in physics in 1921, also makes him one of the early fathers of this theory.







