Blaise Pascal: mathematician,
physicist, inventor, writer, and theologian—truly a polyglot. Most of you probably associate him with his
laws of fluid dynamics. As a scientist,
he was quite important to the then fledgling enlightenment. He even had a unit of pressure, the Pascal,
named for him. As a lover of the
sciences, he probably would be turning over in his grave if he knew how his “wager”
was being misconstrued by many professional “kiruv klowns.”
The wager can be stated as follows:
1.
Either god exists or he does not. Reason cannot decide between the two
alternatives (nb: remember this part. We will get back to this later).
2.
A game is being
played…where heads or tails will turn up (like
the flip of a coin, where there are ONLY two possible outcomes).
3.
You MUST wager (it is not optional).
4.
Let us weigh the
gain and the loss in wagering that God is.
Let us estimate the two
chances.
a.
If you gain, you gain all. (that
is, if God exists, and you wagered that he exists, you have some “eternal
reward” to gain).
b.
If you lose, you lose nothing. (that
is, if God does not exist, and you wagered that he does exist, then it doesn’t
matter, what did you have to lose by acting like he does exist?)
5.
Therefore: It is better to wager that God exists,
because there is an infinite reward to gain, and a finite reward to lose if he
does not. (to use the analogy a
Seventh-day Adventist preacher once used in a sermon that I attended, “it’s
like betting a paper clip and gaining a house.)
6.
As for those who
cannot believe: endeavor to convince
yourself that you believe.
We
begin by analyzing the false dichotomy set up by Blaise Pascal. At best, the wager is a great introduction to
“decision theory.” That is, when
analyzing the opportunity cost of any major decision you have to make, when you
weight what you have to gain/lose by each decision, assigning it a mathematical
probability, you can determine which action is the best to take.
Of course, the simplest illustration of
this is doing a coin toss. The
assumption is that in a coin toss, you have exactly a 50% chance of flipping
heads and a 50% chance of flipping tails. In this situation, there is no advantage to
picking either heads or tails.
A
more sophisticated example would be the classic “Prisoner’s dilemma.” There are many ways to approach this problem,
so pardon me for dumbing it down for the sake of this exercise. Let’s say Rueben and Simeon were both accused
of committing a crime and were interrogated separately. Rueben and Simeon have exactly two choices: They can either stay silent or betray the
other party. The following table shows
what happens with each choice.
|
Reuben stays
silent
|
Rueben
betrays Simeon
|
Simeon stays
silent
|
Both serve one year in prison
|
Simeon serves 3 years, Reuben walks off with no
sentence
|
Simeon
betrays Rueben
|
Rueben serves 3 years, Simeon walks off with no
sentence
|
Both serve two years in prison
|
I
do not want to go through the many ways to approach this dilemma. However, I have seen some websites use this dilemma
as a philosophical “rock-paper-scissors” type game to see how people would “play
each other” if they could recursively reenact this scenario. Although in reality, there are more than two
options, this still serves as a stellar example on how to teach “decision
theory.”
Pascal very likely did not intend for his theory to
be used as a baseline for praxis at all.
In fact, the only thing this wager could actually establish at all is
that one cannot rationalize their beliefs, and in the end, they must resort
elsewhere to justify their beliefs—not logic.
Let us look at the
first proposition of the wager. Either
God exists, or he does not. Reason
cannot decide between the two.
Of course reason cannot actually determine if god
exists. After Pascal’s time, Karl Popper
would establish the concept of “falsifiability.” The fact is, one cannot falsify most
theological arguments. I cannot set up
an experiment or test to empirically disprove that Russell’s Teapot
exists. Therefore, for me to decide
which of the many possible deities or faith systems are more correct than
others, I have to rely on means that are beyond the scope of science and
reason. I must rely on semantical arguments,
conjecture, and faith.
This is key in understanding the real
intention of Pascal’s Wager. I cannot
use logic to find God. So I must rely on
faith.
And so, since I am relying on faith, Pascal decides to make
it interesting. Let us forget about the
fact that Pascal was a practicing Catholic, so he was probably speaking of a
Catholic faith system. Would Pascal have
believed that one who practiced Lutheranism also had an infinite to gain? What about the Jews? Muslims?
Hindus? Zoroastrians? Buddhists?
Jainists? Find yourself a deity,
and assume it exists.
Remember, you only have two choices here. Your choices are like flipping a coin—heads or
tails. Either your preferred deity
exists, or it does not.
If you do what that preferred deity says, you have infinite
to gain.
AND THIS IS WHERE THE SYSTEM FALLS APART.
In reality, there is no universally accepted belief in one
deity that will get you and infinite reward no matter where in the world you
are.
That’s right. The Seven
Noachide Laws? Nope. Not if you are a Catholic. The sixth law, not eating a limb from a live
animal, is not an issue for them.
What about not eating fish on Friday during Lent? Jews don’t have a problem with that.
There are so many laws, rules, regulations, and bylaws
specific to each faith system. Why
should a Jew waste their time praying three times a day every day and extra on
Sabbath when it might be enough to just receive communion and confess your
sins? And why should a Catholic confess
their sins when perhaps what God really might want is for you to shut the f..k
up and just meditate for a few minutes each day?
I mean it’s one thing to assume that either God exists or
does not. But what does that have to do
with Praxis?
Repeat after me: JACK and SQUAT. In that order.
Final thought:
There is a simpler problem with Pascal’s Wager.
Is it better to genuinely disbelieve or disgenuinely
believe?
Let’s say I only keep kosher and pray three times a day
because if I don’t, then the scary invisible pink unicorn in the sky is going
to kick my ass when I die? If I were an
omnipotent and omniscient being, would I give two shits about whether or not
said person actually refrained from eating pork?
Food for thought.
“Bring no more vain offerings. Incense is an abomination to me. New Moon and Sabbath and the calling of
convocations—I cannot endure iniquity and solemn assembly. Your New Moons and your appointed feasts, my
soul hates them. They have become a
burden to me. I am weary of burdening
them.”
--Isaiah 1:13-14.
I believe that the prophet Isaiah hit the nail on the head
here. This can apply to anyone who
thinks that life is about kissing some deity’s ass to get into heaven. If you believe, great, tzeit gezunt. But If you don’t believe, don’t think that
just because you are winging it and feigning devoutness, that the same deity
who was quite bloodthirsty in the Old Testament cares about you.
If you can’t bring yourself to believe, don’t force
yourself.
Search for the answers.
Don’t buy into the bullshit of the people who want to
impose their beliefs on yours.
Search for the truth.
And if you’re frustrated because you can’t find the truth, don’t
take it too hard. You need to find what
works for you. Consider it a
challenge. Enjoy it.
And remember, faith is not a coin toss. It can be a beautiful thing. But not if it is forced upon you or
disingenuous.
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