Einstein & Faith
By WALTER ISAACSON
He was slow in learning how to talk. "My parents were so
worried," he later recalled, "that they consulted a doctor." Even after
he had begun using words, sometime after the age of 2, he developed a
quirk that prompted the family maid to dub him "der Depperte," the
dopey one. Whenever he had something to say, he would try it out on
himself, whispering it softly until it sounded good enough to pronounce
aloud. "Every sentence he uttered," his worshipful younger sister
recalled, "no matter how routine, he repeated to himself softly, moving
his lips." It was all very worrying, she said. "He had such difficulty
with language that those around him feared he would never learn."
His
slow development was combined with a cheeky rebelliousness toward
authority, which led one schoolmaster to send him packing and another
to declare that he would never amount to much. These traits made Albert
Einstein the patron saint of distracted schoolkids everywhere. But they
also helped make him, or so he later surmised, the most creative
scientific genius of modern times.
His cocky contempt for
authority led him to question received wisdom in ways that well-trained
acolytes in the academy never contemplated. And as for his slow verbal
development, he thought that it allowed him to observe with wonder the
everyday phenomena that others took for granted. Instead of puzzling
over mysterious things, he puzzled over the commonplace. "When I ask
myself how it happened that I in particular discovered the relativity
theory, it seemed to lie in the following circumstance," Einstein once
explained. "The ordinary adult never bothers his head about the
problems of space and time. These are things he has thought of as a
child. But I developed so slowly that I began to wonder about space and
time only when I was already grown up. Consequently, I probed more
deeply into the problem than an ordinary child would have."
It
may seem logical, in retrospect, that a combination of awe and
rebellion made Einstein exceptional as a scientist. But what is less
well known is that those two traits also combined to shape his
spiritual journey and determine the nature of his faith. The rebellion
part comes in at the beginning of his life: he rejected at first his
parents' secularism and later the concepts of religious ritual and of a
personal God who intercedes in the daily workings of the world. But the
awe part comes in his 50s when he settled into a deism based on what he
called the "spirit manifest in the laws of the universe" and a sincere
belief in a "God who reveals Himself in the harmony of all that exists."
Einstein
was descended, on both parents' sides, from Jewish tradesmen and
peddlers who had, for at least two centuries, made modest livings in
the rural villages of Swabia in southwestern Germany. With each
generation they had become increasingly assimilated into the German
culture they loved--or so they thought. Although Jewish by cultural
designation and kindred instinct, they had little interest in the
religion itself.
In his later years, Einstein would tell an old
joke about an agnostic uncle who was the only member of his family who
went to synagogue. When asked why he did so, the uncle would respond,
"Ah, but you never know." Einstein's parents, on the other hand, were
"entirely irreligious." They did not keep kosher or attend synagogue,
and his father Hermann referred to Jewish rituals as "ancient
superstitions," according to a relative.
Consequently, when
Albert turned 6 and had to go to school, his parents did not care that
there was no Jewish one near their home. Instead he went to the large
Catholic school in their neighborhood. As the only Jew among the 70
students in his class, he took the standard course in Catholic religion
and ended up enjoying it immensely.
Despite his parents'
secularism, or perhaps because of it, Einstein rather suddenly
developed a passionate zeal for Judaism. "He was so fervent in his
feelings that, on his own, he observed Jewish religious strictures in
every detail," his sister recalled. He ate no pork, kept kosher and
obeyed the strictures of the Sabbath. He even composed his own hymns,
which he sang to himself as he walked home from school.
Einstein's
greatest intellectual stimulation came from a poor student who dined
with his family once a week. It was an old Jewish custom to take in a
needy religious scholar to share the Sabbath meal; the Einsteins
modified the tradition by hosting instead a medical student on
Thursdays. His name was Max Talmud, and he began his weekly visits when
he was 21 and Einstein was 10.
Talmud brought Einstein science
books, including a popular illustrated series called People's Books on
Natural Science, "a work which I read with breathless attention," said
Einstein. The 21 volumes were written by Aaron Bernstein, who stressed
the interrelations between biology and physics, and reported in great
detail the experiments being done at the time, especially in Germany.
Talmud
also helped Einstein explore the wonders of mathematics by giving him a
textbook on geometry two years before he was scheduled to learn that
subject in school. When Talmud arrived each Thursday, Einstein
delighted in showing him the problems he had solved that week.
Initially, Talmud was able to help him, but he was soon surpassed by
his pupil. "After a short time, a few months, he had worked through the
whole book," Talmud recalled. "Soon the flight of his mathematical
genius was so high that I could no longer follow."
Einstein's
exposure to science and math produced a sudden transformation at age
12, just as he would have been readying for a bar mitzvah. He suddenly
gave up Judaism. That decision does not appear to have been drawn from
Bernstein's books because the author made clear he saw no contradiction
between science and religion. As he put it, "The religious inclination
lies in the dim consciousness that dwells in humans that all nature,
including the humans in it, is in no way an accidental game, but a work
of lawfulness that there is a fundamental cause of all existence."
Einstein
would later come close to these sentiments. But at the time, his leap
away from faith was a radical one. "Through the reading of popular
scientific books, I soon reached the conviction that much in the
stories of the Bible could not be true. The consequence was a
positively fanatic orgy of free thinking coupled with the impression
that youth is intentionally being deceived by the state through lies;
it was a crushing impression."
Einstein did,
however, retain from his childhood religious phase a profound faith in,
and reverence for, the harmony and beauty of what he called the mind of
God as it was expressed in the creation of the universe and its laws.
Around the time he turned 50, he began to articulate more clearly--in
various essays, interviews and letters--his deepening appreciation of
his belief in God, although a rather impersonal version of one. One
particular evening in 1929, the year he turned 50, captures Einstein's
middle-age deistic faith. He and his wife were at a dinner party in
Berlin when a guest expressed a belief in astrology. Einstein ridiculed
the notion as pure superstition. Another guest stepped in and similarly
disparaged religion. Belief in God, he insisted, was likewise a
superstition.
At this point the host tried to silence him by
invoking the fact that even Einstein harbored religious beliefs. "It
isn't possible!" the skeptical guest said, turning to Einstein to ask
if he was, in fact, religious. "Yes, you can call it that," Einstein
replied calmly. "Try and penetrate with our limited means the secrets
of nature and you will find that, behind all the discernible laws and
connections, there remains something subtle, intangible and
inexplicable. Veneration for this force beyond anything that we can
comprehend is my religion. To that extent I am, in fact, religious."
Shortly
after his 50th birthday, Einstein also gave a remarkable interview in
which he was more revealing than he had ever been about his religious
sensibility. It was with George Sylvester Viereck, who had been born in
Germany, moved to America as a child and then spent his life writing
gaudily erotic poetry, interviewing great men and expressing his
complex love for his fatherland. Einstein assumed Viereck was Jewish.
In fact, Viereck proudly traced his lineage to the family of the
Kaiser, and he would later become a Nazi sympathizer who was jailed in
America during World War II for being a German propagandist.
Viereck
began by asking Einstein whether he considered himself a German or a
Jew. "It's possible to be both," replied Einstein. "Nationalism is an
infantile disease, the measles of mankind."
Should Jews try to assimilate? "We Jews have been too eager to sacrifice our idiosyncrasies in order to conform."
To
what extent are you influenced by Christianity? "As a child I received
instruction both in the Bible and in the Talmud. I am a Jew, but I am
enthralled by the luminous figure of the Nazarene."
You accept
the historical existence of Jesus? "Unquestionably! No one can read the
Gospels without feeling the actual presence of Jesus. His personality
pulsates in every word. No myth is filled with such life."
Do
you believe in God? "I'm not an atheist. I don't think I can call
myself a pantheist. The problem involved is too vast for our limited
minds. We are in the position of a little child entering a huge library
filled with books in many languages. The child knows someone must have
written those books. It does not know how. It does not understand the
languages in which they are written. The child dimly suspects a
mysterious order in the arrangement of the books but doesn't know what
it is. That, it seems to me, is the attitude of even the most
intelligent human being toward God. We see the universe marvelously
arranged and obeying certain laws but only dimly understand these laws."
Is
this a Jewish concept of God? "I am a determinist. I do not believe in
free will. Jews believe in free will. They believe that man shapes his
own life. I reject that doctrine. In that respect I am not a Jew."
Is
this Spinoza's God? "I am fascinated by Spinoza's pantheism, but I
admire even more his contribution to modern thought because he is the
first philosopher to deal with the soul and body as one, and not two
separate things."
Do you believe in immortality? "No. And one life is enough for me."
Einstein
tried to express these feelings clearly, both for himself and all of
those who wanted a simple answer from him about his faith. So in the
summer of 1930, amid his sailing and ruminations in Caputh, he composed
a credo, "What I Believe," that he recorded for a human-rights group
and later published. It concluded with an explanation of what he meant
when he called himself religious: "The most beautiful emotion we can
experience is the mysterious. It is the fundamental emotion that stands
at the cradle of all true art and science. He to whom this emotion is a
stranger, who can no longer wonder and stand rapt in awe, is as good as
dead, a snuffed-out candle. To sense that behind anything that can be
experienced there is something that our minds cannot grasp, whose
beauty and sublimity reaches us only indirectly: this is religiousness.
In this sense, and in this sense only, I am a devoutly religious man."
People
found the piece evocative, and it was reprinted repeatedly in a variety
of translations. But not surprisingly, it did not satisfy those who
wanted a simple answer to the question of whether or not he believed in
God. "The outcome of this doubt and befogged speculation about time and
space is a cloak beneath which hides the ghastly apparition of
atheism," Boston's Cardinal William Henry O'Connell said. This public
blast from a Cardinal prompted the noted Orthodox Jewish leader in New
York, Rabbi Herbert S. Goldstein, to send a very direct telegram: "Do
you believe in God? Stop. Answer paid. 50 words." Einstein used only
about half his allotted number of words. It became the most famous
version of an answer he gave often: "I believe in Spinoza's God, who
reveals himself in the lawful harmony of all that exists, but not in a
God who concerns himself with the fate and the doings of mankind."
Some
religious Jews reacted by pointing out that Spinoza had been
excommunicated from Amsterdam's Jewish community for holding these
beliefs, and that he had also been condemned by the Catholic Church.
"Cardinal O'Connell would have done well had he not attacked the
Einstein theory," said one Bronx rabbi. "Einstein would have done
better had he not proclaimed his nonbelief in a God who is concerned
with fates and actions of individuals. Both have handed down dicta
outside their jurisdiction."
But throughout his
life, Einstein was consistent in rejecting the charge that he was an
atheist. "There are people who say there is no God," he told a friend.
"But what makes me really angry is that they quote me for support of
such views." And unlike Sigmund Freud or Bertrand Russell or George
Bernard Shaw, Einstein never felt the urge to denigrate those who
believed in God; instead, he tended to denigrate atheists. "What
separates me from most so-called atheists is a feeling of utter
humility toward the unattainable secrets of the harmony of the cosmos,"
he explained.
In fact, Einstein tended to be more critical of
debunkers, who seemed to lack humility or a sense of awe, than of the
faithful. "The fanatical atheists," he wrote in a letter, "are like
slaves who are still feeling the weight of their chains which they have
thrown off after hard struggle. They are creatures who--in their grudge
against traditional religion as the 'opium of the masses'-- cannot hear
the music of the spheres."
Einstein later explained his view of
the relationship between science and religion at a conference at the
Union Theological Seminary in New York. The realm of science, he said,
was to ascertain what was the case, but not evaluate human thoughts and
actions about what should be the case. Religion had the reverse
mandate. Yet the endeavors worked together at times. "Science can be
created only by those who are thoroughly imbued with the aspiration
toward truth and understanding," he said. "This source of feeling,
however, springs from the sphere of religion." The talk got front-page
news coverage, and his pithy conclusion became famous. "The situation
may be expressed by an image: science without religion is lame,
religion without science is blind."
But there was one religious
concept, Einstein went on to say, that science could not accept: a
deity who could meddle at whim in the events of his creation. "The main
source of the present-day conflicts between the spheres of religion and
of science lies in this concept of a personal God," he argued.
Scientists aim to uncover the immutable laws that govern reality, and
in doing so they must reject the notion that divine will, or for that
matter human will, plays a role that would violate this cosmic
causality.
His belief in causal determinism was incompatible
with the concept of human free will. Jewish as well as Christian
theologians have generally believed that people are responsible for
their actions. They are even free to choose, as happens in the Bible,
to disobey God's commandments, despite the fact that this seems to
conflict with a belief that God is all knowing and all powerful.
Einstein,
on the other hand, believed--as did Spinoza--that a person's actions
were just as determined as that of a billiard ball, planet or star.
"Human beings in their thinking, feeling and acting are not free but
are as causally bound as the stars in their motions," Einstein declared
in a statement to a Spinoza Society in 1932. It was a concept he drew
also from his reading of Schopenhauer. "Everybody acts not only under
external compulsion but also in accordance with inner necessity," he
wrote in his famous credo. "Schopenhauer's saying, 'A man can do as he
wills, but not will as he wills,' has been a real inspiration to me
since my youth; it has been a continual consolation in the face of
life's hardships, my own and others', and an unfailing wellspring of
tolerance."
This determinism appalled some friends such as Max
Born, who thought it completely undermined the foundations of human
morality. "I cannot understand how you can combine an entirely
mechanistic universe with the freedom of the ethical individual," he
wrote Einstein. "To me a deterministic world is quite abhorrent. Maybe
you are right, and the world is that way, as you say. But at the moment
it does not really look like it in physics--and even less so in the
rest of the world."
For Born, quantum uncertainty provided an
escape from this dilemma. Like some philosophers of the time, he
latched onto the indeterminacy that was inherent in quantum mechanics
to resolve "the discrepancy between ethical freedom and strict natural
laws."
Born explained the issue to his wife Hedwig, who was
always eager to debate Einstein. She told Einstein that, like him, she
was "unable to believe in a 'dice-playing' God." In other words, unlike
her husband, she rejected quantum mechanics' view that the universe was
based on uncertainties and probabilities. But, she added, "nor am I
able to imagine that you believe--as Max has told me--that your
'complete rule of law' means that everything is predetermined, for
example whether I am going to have my child inoculated." It would mean,
she pointed out, the end of all moral behavior.
But Einstein's
answer was to look upon free will as something that was useful, indeed
necessary, for a civilized society, because it caused people to take
responsibility for their own actions. "I am compelled to act as if free
will existed," he explained, "because if I wish to live in a civilized
society I must act responsibly." He could even hold people responsible
for their good or evil, since that was both a pragmatic and sensible
approach to life, while still believing intellectually that everyone's
actions were predetermined. "I know that philosophically a murderer is
not responsible for his crime," he said, "but I prefer not to take tea
with him."
The foundation of morality, he believed, was rising
above the "merely personal" to live in a way that benefited humanity.
He dedicated himself to the cause of world peace and, after encouraging
the U.S. to build the atom bomb to defeat Hitler, worked diligently to
find ways to control such weapons. He raised money to help fellow
refugees, spoke out for racial justice and publicly stood up for those
who were victims of McCarthyism. And he tried to live with a humor,
humility, simplicity and geniality even as he became one of the most
famous faces on the planet.
For some people, miracles serve as
evidence of God's existence. For Einstein it was the absence of
miracles that reflected divine providence. The fact that the world was
comprehensible, that it followed laws, was worthy of awe.
From Einstein by Walter Isaacson. © 2007 by Walter Isaacson. To be published by Simon & Schuster, Inc.
What happened? Well, as with all boys, puberty comes around 12-14, and with it all the difficulties of reconciling hormones and reason, emotions and mind. It is a very hard time, with some 60-80% of boys reporting difficulties with masturbation and pornography. If I read Einstein's later life as the explication of his silent teenage temptations, I would say this was his critical year. How does anyone handle the assault, much less embarrassed teenagers who think they are uniquely tormented?
When my wife was growing up in one of the ten most populous cities in the world, Seoul, Korea, she too had thoroughly secular parents, with God-fearing grandparents. Her grandmother's prayers and example had nurtured a budding faith in the unknowable, but then was exposed to the hard frost of secular materialism aka evolutionism at age 13. Her teachers were adamant, this was how reality actually was, and it had no room for the spiritual. As her despair grew deeper, and fed with Hermann Hesse, she followed the ten well-worn steps that psychologists say, ends in suicide. At the shallowest step 9, where the emotionally empty victim takes farewells from all relatives and friends, she felt she had to make one last goodbye to her grandmother's best friend, God.
And to her great surprise and my everlasting gratefulness, God answered.
Young and vulnerable Albert evidently had no such event. Rather through the books his mentor Talmud was bringing him, Einstein discovered dualism. That is, he discovered the materialism that takes away all responsibility while holding out the spiritual superiority of the immaterial realms, the same scam Augustine fell for 1500 years earlier. For Einstein, math became the Shamat that drowned his earthly shame, the vespers that absolved his physical sins. It was the end of Albert's kosher observance, and the beginning of his uneasy truce with barely-controlled sexuality. Throughout the remainder of his life, Einstein never betrayed his rock-solid trust in materialism as the savior from his guilt, even when it would have been politically more astute to embrace a more Jewish (or Christian) heritage. This was the foundation of his split with Niels Bohr, whose dualism drew more from the spiritual than from the material realms. Niels, after all, kept his first wife, and his son went on to win his own Nobel prize. But Einstein had only strength sufficient to silence his private demons.
And so in this little story, I see the humanity that Einstein shared, I feel the pain of a precocious teenager, the slick serpentine coils of materialism, and the shame of the Fall. How the world would have been different, if that Catholic school had transmitted to little Albert a better answer. How my life would have been different if God had not answered a 13-yr old's cry.