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Ishmael Hodges's avatar

You have to accept a very narrow version of god to accept Pascal’s Wager. Many religions in the world have different things that must be done in order to avoid calamity. Are you going to cynically “believe” every religion in the world just in case their god exists? No one does that, and in principle if you did, it would no doubt cancel out your possibility of reaching heaven in many of them, because many religions demand strict adherence to their god alone, and any belief in other gods is disqualifying. So it’s not as simple as trying to cover your ass, you have to pick the right god to execute the wager with. Not to mention, it views god as a rather neutral party, does one really think god is going to count someone cynically professing belief in a concept just to avoid punishment and get the actual cookies in the same way as someone with actual faith? I understand that it’s not an argument for god’s existence, but it’s such a narrow arbitrary set of circumstance where the Wager can even hope to make any sense, you have to establish a host of other conditions (which themselves are difficult to prove) in order to arrive at a place where the wager even makes sense to think about. Also, and this is only relative to me, but I personally call it Pascal’s Cowardice. I’m not an intellectual coward who’s going to think something for no other reason than I’ll get smacked if I don’t. So even IF I somehow landed in the position of considering the wager, I still wouldn’t do it as an act of rebellion against such a god who would set up such conditions in the first place. Sorry. It’s a good article, thanks for writing it.

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Ali Afroz's avatar

Very good article, although unlike you, I think our common sense intuition that giving into Pascal’s mugging is definitely not a winning move and pretty stupid should be given great weight. So I continue to think that it’s instrumentaly rational not to believe in God, although I realise that this view has many bizarre conclusions. My view on this problem is kind of similar to my view on population ethics where I have some vague idea of what the correct theory should look like but don’t like any of the actual theories that people can think of, and don’t actually follow them because they all bite, ridiculous bullets. Yes, I am aware this policy is almost certainly leading to self defeating inconsistencies, but I think it’s better than any of the alternatives on offer.

In case anyone tries arguing that actually religion solves the mugging because it’s witchcraft I will just point out that our intuition has nothing to do with the possibility it’s witchcraft and everything to do with a sense that it’s stupid as a policy and will not be good for you. So the witchcraft argument doesn’t really resolve our intuition that it’s not instrumentaly rational to treat such low probability events as important, even when infinite utility is involved.

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