Is it true that once you get to the higher levels of science you start to see or understand god?

No, that's why the argument still exists.

I personally believe that if there is a god, it is an absent one (as in it started the universe and then ditched), or watches and doesn't give a shit what you do and doesn't intervene. I think this just by going off of the seeming non existence of an absolute good and evil, which can be seen by the innumerable amount of "grey areas" we see in ethical dilemmas.
I also believe that if there is an afterlife, it takes place in a parallel dimension to ours, that our souls are tethered to while we go about our lives.
The whole uncertainty idea is really frustrating, and there is really no way to prove or disprove god, despite what people will claim.

we proved that infectious disease travels via microbes
now it could be some other thing, maybe evil spirits but why would we think that?
Same thing applies to God, there's not really a logical reason to believe. But there doesn't have to be, it's religion.

which "god" you fuck. god is such a non-concept, you need to be specific. btw einstein was a pantheist and so referring to his personal pantheistic conception of god. which is to say, unrelated to any other notion of god.

There's a word for that, "deism". Popular amongst disillusioned European Christians 2-3 centuries ago.

Fedora nonsense. Back to USSR.

Yes. Messianic Judaism.

>he can't put spaces in [math]\rm\LaTeX[/math] formulas

I'd say yes but that "God" is not the bearded man sitting on a cloud you're thinking of, that's nonsense from the biggest religions that also happen to be the stupidest ones.

The most intelligent theological position would be some form of pantheism and if you want something more akin to a religion, unironically paganism. One of those modern versions where people don't believe in any of the old deities and aren't practicing old-school witchcraft.

>fedora nonsense
>thousands of years older than your kike-worshiping sandnigger faggotry

>God" is not the bearded man sitting on a cloud
i'd argue for that. it seems to me a big misconception to create the God we know. white skin, beard. In African cultures he would have black skin etc...
I doubt that any of these scientists have a picture of this God in their mind, but rather a God as concept of the whole, all encompassing, "of which nothing can be thought to be greater." Isn't God in every one of us, not as an outside entity, but a goal to be achieved, the Good if you will?