Hello True Blue,
Thanks for your response.
Your reply shows why I take PW in such a dim light. How can either you or I assign some kind of numerical probability value to any of this. For example, you might not die a painless death. By some miracle you may be pulled from the wreckage of your house with 10th degree burns to 500% of your body and spend the next 15 years a miserable broken wretch, slowly and painfully descending into death. And if perchance you choose to live in a cardboard box rather than a house, then why are you not evacuating that just in case? Whatever you answer, I shall chase you with PW.
Our notions of reality are much too precious to be driven by spurious bargains such as that offered by PW. (Dont get me wrong. I have heard numerous Christians appeal to it and have sat through a sermon or two as a child where the Wager was used. Obviously, an argument that is so well used must be effective to some degree. An honest merit may not be its strong point though.)
Given that I acknowledge that god(s) may exist and that it could be God and that God could be your very specific version, then clearly the Wager has a kind of peculiar merit to it.
But how on earth can I really believe in your god, when I genuinely doubt his existence? Hence my point about the airplane. You do not apply PW to that situation even though you presumably acknowledge that the terrible scenario does have some possibility. Why dont you apply PW? Mostly because the reality of that possibility makes little sense to you. You understand the meaning of the possibility. But you will not act on the Wager, simply because you doubt the reality of it occurring.
I do not accept the Wager because I doubt the reality of your scenario. If the supernatural exists then there is no reason to believe that your specific version of it is the correct one. Hence, who says that Hell is infinitely painful? Only another human as far as I can see and you accept his word for it. But why should I?
I see your religious beliefs as no more than a religious belief like any other. I do not apply the Wager to those beliefs. Nor do I apply it to your belief. Why should I only apply it to your belief?
A poster wrote that maybe God is going to send all Christians to Hell and all atheists to Heaven. A bit ridiculous perhaps but there is possibly an element of sense behind the joke. If a Christian worships God because he takes the punt and accepts the Wager then how honest is that Christian? If the atheist denies the existence of the Christian god because he cannot see any evidence for its existence just as he cannot see any evidence for the existence of the Hindu god(s), then who are you to question the honesty of that atheist?
What I am getting at is maybe God prefers an honest atheist to a dishonest Christian. (Edited note added. I am not arguing that you are dishonsest because you see the Wager as having some sense. Please do not get me wrong

)
IOW, if there is any hint of merit behind the Wager, honesty is not it. And given that we generally do not operate according to the rules of the Wager, consistency is not it either.
Regards, Roland