JackDaydream wrote: ↑November 11th, 2022, 4:19 pm
Charlemagne wrote: ↑November 11th, 2022, 2:47 pm
Blaise Pascal was a famous 17th century mathematician, physicist, inventor, philosopher, and theologian.
He is remembered for his Wager Argument for believing in God. He argued that, in the absence of proof positive that God does or does not exist, it is better to bet on the existence of God than to bet against the existence of God. If we are wrong, we lose nothing. If we are right, we stand to gain everything. It is an argument designed for the atheist to consider, not the person who already believes. It is the single argument that the skeptic Bertrand Russell did not attack in any published statements that I can find.
Your thoughts?
The problem which I see with Pascal's wager is that it is a philosophy based on fear, as opposed to faith. If there is a God or higher source of power in the universe the principle of Pascal's wager would be like a God standing over people with a big stick, saying, 'You must believe, or else..?'. This would seem to me to be in contradiction to the spirit of enquiry and a true basis for belief.
I don't follow your logic. Obviously, it is the choice of the atheist, not of God with a big stick. People are free to be as atheistic as they like. God will not stop them. But when they are dead God may well show them how dead wrong they were.
Atheism is not logical. It is openly and spiritually suicidal, accepting death as a final end beyond which we do not survive.
When the skeptics die, when the moment arrives for them to boldly confront their certain and final end, do they consider what bargain they have made with their logic? Do they look at the Christian who dies with hope in his heart? The skeptic must reason that if there is no God, the Christian when he dies will never know that he was wrong. Whereas the skeptic has to know that if he (the skeptic) is right, and there is no God, he also will never know it for a certainty; but if he is wrong, he will at last know it with a good deal more certainty than he bargained for. Surely, in rejecting God, it can come as no surprise to the skeptic that God is free at last to reject him. What a way to end, by losing a foolish bet that God is dead!