Metaphor: Laws cannot be messed up, and no one or thing can violate the laws of nature.
The "God" in "God doesn't play dice" actually refers to the laws of nature. Because Einstein has always opposed personal God, materialized God is the law. Laws cannot be messed up, and no one or thing can violate the laws of nature.
"No matter what, I am convinced that God does not play dice" is a famous saying of physicist Einstein.
Einstein’s original intention was to oppose the uncertainty principle in the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics.
※ He does not admit the non-eigenstate theory of Schr?dinger’s cat, and believes that there must be an internal mechanism that constitutes the true nature of things. He spent several years trying to devise an experiment to test whether this inner reality was at work, but he died before completing the project.
Einstein firmly believed that the laws of nature are deterministic, that physical processes are intrinsically connected, that objective things really exist and meet the strict constraints of physical laws. Any seemingly random process has a more fundamental physical connection.
Einsteins firmly believed in Spinoza’s God. Spinoza’s God refers to the laws of nature. Everything in the universe strictly follows the laws of physics. There is a relationship between cause and effect. the inevitability of natural law.
In the world of quantum mechanics, nothing is certain, everything depends on "probability".
Einstein did not agree with this point of view in quantum mechanics, and he continued to deny quantum mechanics until his death, because in quantum mechanics, all choices in the world depend on probability, and he believes that this is our universe. "inherent attributes".