Yes, we wager prudentially, if there is not benefit then why bother. I think It is the possibility and uncertainty surrounding life after death that makes the wager tenable, regardless of the deity(ies) involved.
↪Cavacava The point is that Pascal's Wager doesn't address the situation where two conflicting religions each claim that beliefs in their respective Gods ensure eternal paradise after death and disbeliefs in their respective Gods (or beliefs in other Gods) ensures eternal hell after death.
How do I use Pascal's Wager to choose between Yahweh and Allah, for example?
I used to see myself as an atheist but have thrown that away because I feel it relies on a kind of faith that it criticizes theism for holding. — darthbarracuda
Although most gods in our history haven't been that type. — darthbarracuda
The Cosmological Argument does not lead me to accept the existence of a deity, merely the plausibility of a First Cause. — darthbarracuda
1.) The Problem of Evil — darthbarracuda
... there are at least 2 major deficiencies in the free will defense, viz. that it is impotent to explain suffering caused by "natural evils" such as plagues, earthquakes, tsunamis, etc, and also that it presumes that there is no justified suspension of free will, or that the free actions of man must never be impeded in any way, even if only to stop the most abject horror from occurring. That is, a proponent of the free will defense is committed to believing that for God to intervene to stop the Holocaust (or even just to make it one iota less horrific) would be a greater evil than the Holocaust itself. This view is not only absurd from a rational standpoint, but is rather morally repugnant, in my estimation.
It's as if God has an entirely different standard and still gets to be called good. Even though we view it as a major failing that the world permitted the holocaust to occur.
And religious practice is, in some sense, being trained to think about it the right way. — Wayfarer
"What Dawkins does too often is to concentrate his attack on fundamentalists. But there are many believers who are just not fundamentalists, Fundamentalism is another problem. I mean, Dawkins in a way is almost a fundamentalist himself, of another kind."
Atoms are obviously capable of consciousness, so how does the conclusion follow?IF all is [at minimum] 'atoms & void', THEN g/G too is [at minimum] 'atoms & void' maximally, or perfectively, configured, AND THEREFORE g/G is oblivious, or indifferent, to every non-maximally, or imperfectly, configuration of 'atoms & void' (e.g. mortals, stars). — 180 Proof
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