Originally Posted by
Joshua260
Maybe you should study the Pensees before speaking for Pascal.
To be clear, I did not suggest that you just read up on Pascal's wager, which is so often taken out of it's intended context on so many atheist internet sites (I've seen quite a few on this subject, and I've never seen them get it right). Rather, I suggested that you read his work entitled the Pensees, in which he provides the context surrounding his offering of his wager. If you had, then you would no doubt know that he had already considered various evidences and logical arguments (including those ruling out other faiths as unreasonable) before coming to the point where he narrowed down his list of "reasonable faiths" to Christianity alone. Based on that foundation, he THEN began to offer his wager.
Further proof that you either did not read the Pensees, or you did not understand Pascal's argument. By the time he offered his wager, he had already ruled out all other faiths as being unreasonable.
You said in your last post that "Second-hand accounts are not trustworthy". I hope that means that you did not learn all you know about Pascal's wager just from some atheist internet sites. As I said above, I've never found one yet that represented Pascal's wager within it's intended context. Pascal's wager, taken within it's intended context of the Pensees, is actually a sound logical argument.
I know you don't believe, but let me try to troubleshoot the real problem I think you have with Pascal 's wager. I desire to do this because I've heard so many atheists trash Pascal's wager unfairly. I don't believe it's the wager itself that bothers them, but it all points back to the old evidence debate. You said yourself:
First, remember that Pascal had performed his own research concerning evidences and philosophical arguments and had come to the conclusion (after ruling out all other faiths) that it was just as reasonable to believe in the Christian god as to not believe in the Christian god.
Secondly, he laid out the gains and losses of believing and being wrong, versus not believing and being wrong.
Then he came to the conclusion I paraphrased:
"Given that it is equally as reasonable to believe in the Christian god (as opposed to other faiths he ruled out for various reasons) or not, it is better to believe in the Christian god and be wrong than not to believe in the Christian god and be wrong."
So given the truth of 1 and 2, Pascal's conclusion is the logical result. The problem I believe you have is that you do not accept premise 1, which is the old evidence argument. So the logical and productive progression in a discussion concerning Pascal's wager is to accept the soundness of the argument itself (which it appears that you finally did so by your comment above), and move on to discuss the truth of it's premises.