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  2. It rejected a conflict between science and religion, and held that cosmic religion was necessary for science. [10] For Einstein, "science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind." [46] [47] He told William Hermanns in an interview that "God is a mystery. But a comprehensible mystery.

  3. Relationship between religion and science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relationship_between...

    The relationship between religion and science involves discussions that interconnect the study of the natural world, history, philosophy, and theology. Even though the ancient and medieval worlds did not have conceptions resembling the modern understandings of "science" or of "religion", [1] certain elements of modern ideas on the subject recur ...

  4. Albert Einstein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Einstein

    The state of Israel was established without his help in 1948; Einstein was limited to a marginal role in the Zionist movement. [186] Upon the death of Israeli president Weizmann in November 1952, Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion offered Einstein the largely ceremonial position of President of Israel at the urging of Ezriel Carlebach.

  5. Intersubjective verifiability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intersubjective_verifiability

    Intersubjective verifiability. Intersubjective verifiability is the capacity of a concept to be readily and accurately communicated between different individuals ("intersubjectively"), and to be reproduced under varying circumstances for the purposes of verification. It is a core principle of empirical, scientific investigation.

  6. Inductivism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inductivism

    Inductivism is the traditional and still commonplace philosophy of scientific method to develop scientific theories. [1][2][3][4] Inductivism aims to neutrally observe a domain, infer laws from examined cases—hence, inductive reasoning —and thus objectively discover the sole naturally true theory of the observed.

  7. Einstein and Religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Einstein_and_Religion

    Einstein and Religion. Einstein and Religion: Physics and Theology (1999) is a book on the religious views of Nobel prize -winning physicist Albert Einstein by Max Jammer, published by Princeton University Press. [1][2]

  8. Theory of everything - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_of_everything

    A theory of everything (TOE), final theory, ultimate theory, unified field theory, or master theory is a hypothetical, singular, all-encompassing, coherent theoretical framework of physics that fully explains and links together all aspects of the universe. [1]: 6 Finding a theory of everything is one of the major unsolved problems in physics ...

  9. Scientific realism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_realism

    Scientific realism is the view that the universe described by science is real regardless of how it may be interpreted. A believer of scientific realism takes the universe as described by science to be true (or approximately true), because of their assertion that science can be used to find the truth (or approximate truth) about both the physical and metaphysical in the Universe.