Lion IRC;12805534:
Pascals Wager is not an argument for the existence of God. It is an argument for pragmatism.
It (basically) says if you are agnostic about God, and can’t make up your mind, why not
give His existence the benefit of the doubt? You’ve got nothing to lose.
Yes, but that would only be possible if you can force yourself to believe in something that you wouldn’t naturally accept.
…
‘force’ yourself to believe?
There is no coercion or attempt at ‘force’. It’s not some Jedi mind trick.
And I’m not sure what you mean by “naturally” as opposed to
unnaturally believing/accepting something.
It’s YOUR brain. One can’t blame Pascal for the way it operates if indeed one thinks something unnatural is going on inside there.
…There are still a number of flaws in Pascal’s Wager, and it should not be an argument that we Christians use.
Do you agree with me that it is not an argument for the
existence of God but rather, a basic argument for common sense pragmatism?
…I would personally NEVER use it because the Armenian Orthodox Church accepts that there are other ways to achieve salvation besides believing in Jesus and Christianity.
Why should someone care about the afterlife and salvation
even when talking to you?
Pascal answers with the rebuttal…why shouldn’t you care about the afterlife?
And he provides a simple, logical reason. Because - if the afterlife doesn’t exist, it won’t matter.
But if it DOES, then it would seem to matter a LOT.
Of course some atheists and anti-theists answer Pascal by citing the two laws of New Atheism.
- There is no God
- If there is a God, I hate him.
Christopher Hitchens used to say he hated the idea of God and an afterlife and eternity etc.
But towards the end of his terminal illness he softened a bit saying, when asked about the possibility of an afterlife…“I like surprises”
…Besides, what if you died and found out that Zeus is the king of the gods?
Then that would mean Pascal was right.