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I'm not sure what's causing the confusion. At which point was it unclear that I think the wager is completely ridiculous?It's the strongest and weakest. Look, either accept the argument or not. Don't waste peoples time on this thread
I'm not sure what's causing the confusion. At which point was it unclear that I think the wager is completely ridiculous?
How exactly is it the strongest and weakest argument at the same time? It's either one or the other. Make up your mind.
The point you've made was a contradiction, I addressed that in the last part of my previous post.
You cannot know something and doubt it at the same time. Knowing implies certainty. Doubt is uncertainty.
What you did was attempt to dodge your first contradiction: that doubt is what leads to growth and progress but is also bad.
Either way, whenever you have the time it'd be nice if you'd address either contradiction and not start up a new topic.
I will respond to other posts later. But wanted to respond to this because you have to know I brought up Pascal's wager for unbelievers, not "people of weak Faith" as you mentioned.? just checking.
No, I'm not. As I've said, I think it's utterly ridiculous. The wager assumes a lot of things, among them: that it's as reasonable to assume that God exists in the first place, that we can estimate the probability of each outcome or that the probability of the desired outcome is in your favor or even know the outcomes at all, or that an omniscient God can be tricked in such a fashion by someone interested solely in self-preservation instead of loving Him, or that your God is the correct God to hedge your bets on, et cetera et cetera.Nope it's both. And youre not accepting the point of the argument
Dear lord, another of you...where are the Christians when you need them!
Look, you (I'm assuming purposefully) edited my explanation on how doubt is bad by leaving out my last sentence.. slanting the truth. Do you want to practice habbits of tabloid magazines to pursue your Truth? Makes me wonder if you are genuinely seeking. Which brings me to my point. If you doubt your whole life. "I don't think God exists" without having legitimate reason (hence, the seeking) then it is a BAD thing. Now, is that so hard to see? No contradiction there, pal. You fabricated one.
Most of the doubters don't come here to seek, they come to fight. Remember Jesus said "behold I am sending you as lambs among wolves, be as shrewd as a snake and harmless as a dove."Dear lord, another of you...where are the Christians when you need them!
Look, you (I'm assuming purposefully) edited my explanation on how doubt is bad by leaving out my last sentence.. slanting the truth. Do you want to practice habbits of tabloid magazines to pursue your Truth? Makes me wonder if you are genuinely seeking. Which brings me to my point. If you doubt your whole life. "I don't think God exists" without having legitimate reason (hence, the seeking) then it is a BAD thing. Now, is that so hard to see? No contradiction there, pal. You fabricated one.
14 Stand your ground, putting on the belt of truth and the body armor of Gods righteousness. 15 For shoes, put on the peace that comes from the Good News so that you will be fully prepared.[d] 16 In addition to all of these, hold up the shield of faith to stop the fiery arrows of the devil.[e] 17 Put on salvation as your helmet, and take the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.
18 Pray in the Spirit at all times and on every occasion. Stay alert and be persistent in your prayers for all believers everywhere.
At your request, here is a response from a Christian.I find it funny how NOT ONE Christian has responded to my original response.
From my observations I have come to notice that there are people who are honest and good, and people who are dishonest and bad. Those who are honest and good, when spoken to about Jesus, genuinely respond in favor of what I say. What it comes down to is the nature of Jesus. Many people really have such a distorted view of the nature of Jesus that it takes a lot of work to help them see Him clearly. But it is my firm belief that on the day of judgment when Jesus drafts the sheep from the goats our hearts will be laid bare in His glorious light and the truth will expose all lies. So in response I give you a clobber quote:Oh, no. Not Pascal's Wager. Pascal's Wager does not work in religion for many reasons. I'll name some briefly:
1. Which god am I supposed to 'Take a chance' with? Why the Christian god? There have been millions of god, so am I supposed to do it with all of them?
Pascal's wager doesn't work when proving Christianity. Your chances of believing are not calculable, it depends on your nature as a person. Out of twelve disciples only one was Judas. And those twelve were selected by Jesus because they were fit for His purpose. None of us therefore are qualified to pass a judgment who is drafted as sheep or goat, but we must be concerned with our own warrant of fitness.2. If there is a 0.001% chance that I am wrong and Christianity is correct (which I think is likely), then you're saying I should risk it and just believe. Let's take that to everyday life. Why would I go out and drive somewhere? I'll probably get to my destination okay, but there's a much greater chance I will die by leaving the house than not.
MattRose currently has a long thread about this, http://www.christianforums.com/t7570574/ He is discussing whether hell is valid given that contracts are void when committed under duress. If you want my opinion, Ray has given the best response yet http://www.christianforums.com/t7570574-25/#post579021593. If I was to believe in god ONLY because of fear I might be wrong, then god would obviously know this and send me to hell anyway. I would be in denial because I wouldn't really believe in him, but I am pretending to, to give me false hope that I am alright in the next life...WHICH I WOULDN'T BE!
Sin is the act of harming God's creation. You shouldn't want to live like that even if you don't believe in God.4. I think Pascal's Wager works in the opposite way, in this case. You say that if I am wrong, I have wasted my afterlife. But I say, if you are wrong, and I am right, you have wasted a considerable amount of time worshiping something which does not exist and believing that your next life will be better than this one and, as a result, you haven't lived your ONLY life to the fullest. So, if I am wrong, at least half of my lived were lived to the fullest. Whereas if you are wrong, your ONLY life was wasted.
Well we've already established that I don't believe Pascal's wager is effective in producing genuine faith anyway, so there's really no argument from me.Read this: Pascal's wager - RationalWiki
Well, that's true too, but the arguments on the page explain why Pascal's Wager isn't effective even at convincing people to hedge their bets on God because it's logic is fundamentally flawed.Well we've already established that I don't believe Pascal's wager is effective in producing genuine faith anyway, so there's really no argument from me.
This thread is a ticking time bomb. As soon as a mod sees this, it's most likely going to be closed or at least moved to a different forum.
Well, that's true too, but the arguments on the page explain why Pascal's Wager isn't effective even at convincing people to hedge their bets on God because it's logic is fundamentally flawed.
To me a wager involves a finite set of options in which you can actually calculate, to some degree of accuracy, the numerical probability of any one of the items in the set being the desired outcome.
If you told me to pick a number without giving me the set of numbers from which I could choose and then asked me how much I would wager that I had picked the correct number, I would have no way of knowing the probability of being correct and therefore be inclined not to make the wager at all.
There is no "fifty-fifty" chance of being correct about the Christian doctrine. Its completely non-numerical. So there's no rational basis for wagering anything.
Also, the two examples given in the OP are quite totally different than belief in a religious doctrine. A phone call to make sure your house is not burning down takes about 8 seconds to do; changing your religious beliefs may take years of removing biases due to culture, upbringing and state of mind. Similarly, buying a ticket for a dollar when you have a clear 50-50 chance seems quite a simple task in which you know your chance of being correct is 50%. There is no such numerical basis when choosing a religion or worldview. Even if you set it up so it appears Boolean (God or no God, 1 or 0), that still doesn't mean that your chances are 50% of being right. There just isn't any numerical basis to the whole argument.
Pascal's wager has never made any sense to me because its a blatant use of the logical fallacy known as false dilemma
I'm sorry, but as CryptoLutheran demonstrated in post #33, Christians don't necessarily need to blindly accept nonsense just because it's pro-Christian nonsense. It's called using your brain.Good. Maybe they should! C'mon! Christians? You might as well have announced to the Atheists they are right and that there's no god when you don't back other Christians on stuff like this.
I'm sorry, but you're demonstrating the exact behavior humblehumility ascribed to you in post #30. Whenever your faulty logic gets pointed out for what it is, all you do is freeze like a deer in the headlights, and proceed to go on a tangent down an unrelated train of thought without even trying at all to address the arguments presented to you.Do you realize youre in the minority compared to a pretty well-established majority who believe Pascal's wager is sound philosophical reasoning? Any philosophy class will teach you it as one of proponent arguments.
Oh yeah. Youre right. The wager we make about this life is A LOT more pressing than any wager we could make IN this life. So they are different.
And yes, Pascal's demonstration is proof that you must wager, whether you like it or not. Sorry I'm not gonna sugar coat it. We are moving beings...getting closer and closer to shore. Some boats (you) don't believe there is a shore because of fog that blocks us from "seeing" it. I believe, however, that there is shore, for innumerable reasons.
And as far as you thinking Christianity has nothing to do with the examples explained, youre just thinking yourself into a pit. Many many atheists do that...chasing their own tails. It's similar to very intelligent students not testing well because they over-think the test questions. It is in fact, much of the same thing. You soul is in danger, just as those loved ones in the example's life is in danger. There is, however, some one who can rescue us from that danger. Jesus in our case, a firefighter in the other example. The point of the matter is, do you find it important enough to "assess" the risk of the POSSIBILITY? In the example, some one just -told- you they were in danger, just like a Christian tells you your soul is in danger. Do you find it worth your while to pursue the facts? Like I already mentioned, many atheists follow Jesus' teachings, while remaining atheists because they do so mentally, rather than opening their heart to him as Savior.
I'm sorry, but you're demonstrating the exact behavior humblehumility ascribed to you in post #30. Whenever your faulty logic gets pointed out for what it is, all you do is freeze like a deer in the headlights, and proceed to go on a tangent down an unrelated train of thought without even trying at all to address the arguments presented to you.
I have no idea what youre referring to. Show me the logic I didn't answer, and I'll answer it.
Yes, I do. But doubt in and of itself is not good. It's good if you are actually seeking.
What if you found the love of your life. Let's just say you believe in pre-destination and it was possible to know that it was indeed the love of your life (in the same way that we can hypothetically prove God). But what if when you met her you were not open to loving her? That wouldn't go over so well, would it?