The argument itself does seem to have a lot of problems, especially if you look at it objectively. I guess maka-ingun jud ta nga it's very biased against the other religions. But still I prefer to look at it another way. The notes that became the Pensees were originally intended to form part of a larger apologetic work for the Christian religion di ba? So he had a plan to write a major work to defend the faith. Unfortunately he died before completing it. So I guess the wager can be seen as part of a larger apologetic work. The wager does indeed look like it's a very insufficient and flawed argument for God's existence, but considering that it was only part of a larger apologetic work that he was unable to finish, we can probably say that Pascal intended to present as his argument not just the wager but his work as a whole.
Today, kung mao ra na imo reason ngano mutuo ka og Ginoo, siguro maka-ingun jud ta nga mura'g taphaw ra man kaayo na nga rason oi hehe... But again the context of Pascal's time I think was that people did not have confidence in reason to bring them to a knowledge of a Supreme Being. So he suggested the wager as an option for people who were very cynical about the reason's ability to come to any knowledge of an ultimate truth.yeps, that wager wreaks of cowardice and selfishness.
practicality...dont know about that.
I think the reason why it's called "free will" is that our will can sometimes be "unfree". We can "will" ourselves to do bad things, like get into vices or addictions, but those things make us unfree. There are certain actions which when we do them consistently, we become more free to do things that make us better human beings.will on its own is already free.
thats just an oxy***** to me.hehe
if your god knows everything...with its omnimaxness, what you have is just an illusion of "free will".
We are still free because we have the power to choose our courses of action. It's just that God knows what will happen to us no matter what decision we make. God knows the countless outcomes that our decisions may lead us to. But he never controls us because he respects our dignity.![]()






