Seth wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:Seth wrote:
And therefore, Pascal's Wager...
And just by the way, if one truly believes in God (whether it's a delusion or not) then obedience to God is not irrational or crazy, it's the only really sane thing to do, given the ultimate consequences.
Pascal's Wager only applies if what one "believes" matters in terms of what the god that turns out to exist does to one. And, it assumes that belief can be contrived or self-serving, as opposed to honestly held.
Nope, not quite. The corollary argument by Pascal says that since one cannot prove God's existence either way, one might as well believe and one can make that belief a reality by living as if the wager were true.
Nope. Not quite. If I "live as if" I believe I have a dog, that doesn't mean I believe I have a dog. I'm just pretending.
And, why do you insist on referring to "God?" Don't you mean "since one cannot prove any gods' existences either way, one might as well pick one or more to believe in? Why does Pascal's Wager, in your mind, only apply to God and not other gods.
Seth wrote:
So, Pascal's Wager is more like: If you don't believe in a particular god, then you might have bad things happen to you, if that god requires belief in order to not do bad things to you. So, what do you have to lose except to fake belief in that god?
Unless, of course, one is able to convince oneself to honestly believe something one honestly doesn't believe....
And what Pascal is saying, and what every priest and pastor and imam knows is that by living as if you have belief, you can create the belief in your mind and make it "honest."
In other words, you might be able to honestly change your mind. Of course that is true.
But which god do you choose? Do I live as if Allah exists, or do I live as if Jehovah exists or do I live as if the Aton exists? Do I live as if the Goddess exists? Or, is Pascal's Wager a way of saying that we should pick the deity that promises the worst outcome by virtue of nonbelief?
Seth wrote:
I think, ultimately, the only sane thing to do is to be honest and true to oneself, and use the cognitive abilities one has to come to the best conclusion one can reach. Beyond that, it's at best guesswork. And, it seems to me that any sort of benign deity would value honest, yet mistaken, use of one's faculties (which were bestowed up on by said deity), rather than a contrived belief out of a desire for personal gain. The former seems more like what a good god would want, and the latter seems more like what would be desired by a dishonest god. If there is a god, and it's the latter then all bets are off anyway, and we can't be sure that it won't harm even the most honest and devout believer.
I think ultimately one ought to look at what it means to live the life of a believer and determine if doing so leads to moral and ethical strength of character and happiness or not. If it does, then Pascal suggests that doing so would be beneficial not only temporally but eternally, if it turns out that God exists.
It clearly doesn't mean just one thing to "live the life of a believer," and the "believers" are all over the map. There is no such thing as "the" life of a believer. So, your task has to be rephrased to, "...ultimately one ought to look at what it means to live one or more of the lives of one or more of the believers of one or more of the various and myriad religions and determine if any of them lead to moral and ethical strength of character and happiness or not." One can't live the life of a believer in Allah and also be living the life of a believer in Yahweh.
For me, it appears painfully obvious that generally speaking believers in any religion or deity do not have more moral or ethical strength of character and they do not have more happiness. It seems, at best, an equivalence. Some Allah believers are happy, some not. Some Jehovah believers are happy, some not. Some Yahweh believers are happy, some not. Some atheists are happy, some not. I see no indication that there is a greater prevalence of happiness among any group of believers or nonbelievers.
Seth wrote:
The question is, of course, whether a specific religious belief and the practices associated with it make one a better person living a happier, more fulfilled life or whether it induces one to strap a bomb to one's chest and kill people. I submit the former is a good thing and people should be encouraged to live good lives, even if it takes a self-imposed God delusion to help them do so.
Unless of course, one wants to apply Pascal's Wager to the pro-bomb-strapping deity....then, of course, one ought to live life as if that deity exists, and thusly transform one's mind to an honest belief in the pro-bomb-strapping deity.
Seth wrote:
Not everyone is as coldly rational and highly intelligent as the Pope of Atheism, Richard Dawkins, and many people rely upon their faith for solace, succor and as a way to live happier, better lives.
Many people use a lot of different things for solace, succor and a way to live a happier, better life. To me, I find atheism to provide solace and succor, as it takes away any threat of eternal damnation, and removes the fear that the religions that warn against hells and hadeses and purgatories impose. "Although the time of death is approaching me, I am not afraid of dying and going to Hell or (what would be considerably worse) going to the popularized version of Heaven. I expect death to be nothingness and, for removing me from all possible fears of death, I am thankful to atheism." Isaac Asimov.
Seth wrote:
And I laud and support them in that, so long as their actions are peaceable, and encourage them to live more godly lives because it's by and large better for society as a whole if they do so.
I laud people for leading goodly, not godly lives. I just add an "o," but it does to me seem to make a world of difference. If people were to live goodly lives - better lives - then that would make society as a whole better. Whether they worship a god or not doesn't do anything, in my view, nor is the mere fact of following a god or gods something to be, in my view, lauded. Living a good life is to be lauded.