The true value of a person first determines to what extent and in what sense he is liberated from himself
1. In modern physics, Einstein can be regarded as He is the ancestor of immortality.
2. Einstein explored the mysteries of the universe, exhausted all reasoning, and finally discovered the theory of relativity.
3. Einstein passed away peacefully in 1955 at the age of seventy-six.
4. It seems unexpected that Einstein’s genius was so widely appreciated.
5. Abstract Based on the definition of scientific humanism and humanistic scientism, this article takes Einstein as the topic and focuses on analyzing his scientism and humanism thoughts and practices that complement each other and complement each other. and its implications for.
Einstein’s famous aphorisms
1. Because of my contempt for authority, fate punished me and made me become an authority.
2. With the support of a lofty purpose, if you work non-stop, even if it is slow, you will definitely succeed.
3. Everyone has a certain ideal, which determines the direction of his efforts and judgment. In this sense, I never regard comfort and happiness as the purpose of life itself - this ethical basis, I call it the ideal of the pig pen.
4. Patience and perseverance will always be rewarded.
5. The immortal honor of science lies in its effect on the human mind, which overcomes people's insecurity in front of themselves and in front of nature.
6. It is impossible to be a good political consultant with an empty stomach.
7. I never regard comfort and enjoyment as the purpose of life. I call it the pig pen ideal.
8. Science is never-ending, it is an eternal mystery.
9. The most beautiful thing in the world is to have a few serious friends with upright minds and hearts.
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10. Light up my path and continue to It gave me new courage to face the ideals of life happily, which are goodness, beauty and truth. Life would seem to me to be empty without the cordial feeling between like-minded people, without the absorption of the objective world, that object which can never be reached in the realm of artistic and scientific work. The vulgar objects to which men strive—possessions, vanity, luxury—have always seemed to me despicable.