Einstein also said, "Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler."
Analog is real. Digital is an approximation. Digital can never "capture" as well as analog. However, our ability to replicate or transmit/receive is limited for analog; less so for digital.
Although digital can't capture as well as analog, the difference is becoming negligible. Thus a music recording engineer can finally now skip using magnetic tape. But this is very recent indeed, from a real world point of view.
So, analog may be compared to a plaster cast of the print of a tire tread left in the dust. And digital could be looked at as a set of measurements that, put together, describe the same print. The former is easy, accurate, true; also a plaster cast is hard to file away, and skill is needed not to disturb the print (which of course is destroyed in the process).
The latter, digital, is only as true as the measurements; many measurements are needed for any semblance of description. It's beyond the ability of a person to do the measuring. You can assess the benefit of computers by how they make possible a replacement of the casting method.
A target shooter needs both accuracy and precision. The plaster cast is gloriously accurate, but not precise. The converse is true for the digital process.