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  • Remember when you were little and your mom told you to eat your spinach so you’d grow up big and strong?

  • Or in college, when you set your clock ten minutes ahead, to fool yourself into getting to class on time?

  • We all engage in useful fictionsthings that we choose to believe, because, they just make life easier.

  • And when we do this, we are being pragmatists.

  • Pragmatism is based on the theory that finding true beliefs is

  • less important than finding beliefs that work, practically, in the living of your life.

  • In this view, it doesn’t really matter whether spinach actually helps muscle growth;

  • if eating spinach will improve your life, and believing that itll make you strong convinces you to eat it

  • then it’s a useful belief, which is all that matters.

  • Pragmatism is relatively recent as philosophical movements go.

  • But some of the most well-known American pragmatists

  • like William James, and, I would argue, Indiana Jones

  • have an ideological ancestor in 17th century mathematician and philosopher Blaise Pascal.

  • You can be a pragmatist about basically anything

  • knowledge, spinach, metaphysics, ethics, or whether it’s actually 11:30 right now or 11:40.

  • But Pascal took a pragmatic approach to one of the biggest issues in philosophy: God’s existence.

  • [Theme Music]

  • Pascal was a theist, which, given his place in history may not be all that surprising.

  • But what is weird is that Pascal’s argument for God’s existence had very little to do with whether God was actually real.

  • Instead, it had everything to do with with whether belief in his existence was practical.

  • This reasoning became known as Pascal’s Wager, and it’s really a gambler’s argument for religious belief.

  • Pascal’s thinking went like this:

  • Either God exists or he doesn’t, and reason will never give us an answer.

  • So you must choose blindly to believe or not to believe in Godyou can’t abstain from choosing

  • If you choose to believe in God and he exists, you get an infinite rewardheaven.

  • If you choose to believe in God and he doesn’t exist, youre not really out much.

  • If you choose not to believe in God and he doesn’t exist, you also don’t gain much.

  • If you choose not to believe in God and he does exist, you get infinite punishmenthell.

  • Therefore, the smart bet is to put your chips on God existing, every time.

  • Pascal argued that, if there is the slightest chance that God existseven if that chance is low

  • only a fool would bet against his existence, given that the stakes are so high.

  • In the face of incomplete information, Pascal decided,

  • we should play the odds, and believe whatever offers us the greatest benefit.

  • It’s kind of brilliant, right?

  • But there are a couple of ways you could argue against this.

  • You might say Pascal’s done the math wrongthat choosing to walk the straight and

  • narrow in the service of an imaginary deity actually does cost you something.

  • Like, you might miss out on stuff that you would otherwise want to do

  • like, sleeping in on Sunday mornings, or living a heavy-metal-rock-star lifestyle, or, I dunno, coveting stuff.

  • By this logic, you’d lose out if you abstained from all of that in the name of something

  • that ended up not being real.

  • But Pascal, like William James, disagreed with this line of reasoning,

  • because he saw great personal benefit in being a believer.

  • He thought theists have better lives, not because God is blessing them as some kind of reward,

  • but because belief simply has inherent benefits

  • like the security of feeling that the world is ordered and meaningful

  • That someone is always looking out for you

  • That death isn’t the end.

  • Now, even if you agree that religious belief is comforting, you might still question Pascal’s motives.

  • Does believing in something because it’s the safest bet really win you a ticket to heaven?

  • Doesn’t God want you to be less self-interested when it comes to believing in him?

  • Well, not according to Pascal.

  • He thought how and why you choose to believe doesn’t really matter, because the fact is,

  • God doesn’t care how he gets you, as long as he gets you.

  • OK, so how do you will yourself into believing in something, just because it’s where the smart money is?

  • Easy! Pascal said you essentially brainwash yourself into true belief,

  • so that what starts out as self-interest can eventually grow into an honest conviction.

  • And you do this, basically, by walking the walk and talking the talk.

  • Start going to church. Start praying. Hang out with other believers.

  • At first it might seem weird and disingenuous, but over time, itll become an ingrained part of your belief system.

  • You know what it’s kind of like? Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.

  • It’s probably pop-culture’s finest allegory of pragmatic belief in action.

  • Throughout the whole Indiana Jones trilogy – I’m just gonna pretend the fourth one was never made

  • Indy is painted as a pretty agnostic character.

  • He hunts religious relics for a living,

  • but the powers that those relics are said to possess are justhocus pocusto him.

  • So, at the end of The Last Crusade, (spoilers) Indy manages to find the Holy Grail,

  • in an ancient temple, after getting through a bunch of booby traps.

  • And each trap is kind of a test of faith.

  • He has to know where to kneel, and how to spell the name of God,

  • and he has to jump into an abyss with the hope that he will somehow survive.

  • Indy ends up passing all of these tests.

  • But not because he suddenly stops being agnostic and starts believing in Godat least not that we know of.

  • Instead, he just does what he has to do. He’s literally going through the motions.

  • There’s something about that, that would make Pascal proud.

  • Because, to him, it would probably look like Indy was on the path to eventually, truly believing.

  • Now, some critics have pointed out that, when it comes to a really usable belief system,

  • youre gonna need morethan just: fake ittil you make it.

  • For example, maybe you were one of those kids, raised in a religious household, who was just never feeling it.

  • We all know people who were immersed in a culture of religious belief from birth,

  • but end up to rejecting those beliefs as adults.

  • And for those people, trying to force yourself to believe is not only ineffective,

  • it can lead to some pretty serious unhappinessthe exact opposite of what a pragmatist wants.

  • So it might be that, for a pragmatist, the best advice for non-believers is that they just gotta live their lives.

  • Maybe theyll find God and maybe they won’t,

  • but making yourself swallow it like medicine doesn’t seem like the way to maximize belief.

  • OK, so Pascal said that we should believe in God because belief is just practically useful.

  • But Soren Kierkegaard, the 19th century Danish philosopher, went even further.

  • He adopted the famous tenant of fideism, stating: “I believe because it is absurd to believe.”

  • Fideism is the school of thought that says religious belief has to come from faith alone.

  • It says that stuff like arguments and evidence actually kill what’s great about religion

  • which is wonder and mystery.

  • Kierkegaard said that the fantastic thing about belief in God is that it’s entirely irrational

  • you can’t do it with your brain.

  • You have to take what he called the leap to faith.

  • And, again, here I turn to Indiana Jones.

  • Remember when Indy faces his last test of faith-slash-booby trap in the Last Crusade?

  • He has to try to make an impossible jump across a scary dark pit to get to the Holy Grail.

  • There is no way he can do itit’s suicide.

  • But, it turns out, there’s a bridge.

  • He can’t see it, but in order to find out that it’s there, he has to take that step.

  • He has to take a chance on something that defies all reason.

  • That’s what religion is all about, according to Kierkegaard.

  • We jump and hope like hell that God catches us.

  • And the only way to know, is to jump.

  • We have to surrender reason to get to truth.

  • Now, I hate to break it to you, but this is the end of our unit on the philosophy of religion.

  • I’m interested to hear what you think about that in the comments.

  • But before we go, I want to head to the Thought Bubble for some Flash Philosophy.

  • Our old friend Bertrand Russell once posited the existence of a china teapot,

  • orbiting the sun somewhere between Earth and Mars.

  • Let’s say that back on Earth there were a bunch of Teapot-ists, people who argued that,

  • since we can’t disprove the teapot’s existence, they were justified in believing in it.

  • Not only that, they constructed great buildings, erected statues, composed songs, held weekly services,

  • and appealed to the teapot for help in their daily lives.

  • But everyone else thought the Teapot-ists were ridiculous, because there was no evidence

  • to support their belief in the teapot.

  • For their part, the Teapot-ists just replied that none of the Ateapot-ists could prove that it wasn’t there.

  • Thanks, Thought Bubble! Aaand I’m sure you can see where I’m going with this.

  • Pragmatism, or the leap to faith, might be a solution to the problem of God’s existence,

  • if youre not satisfied with any of the other, more evidence-based arguments.

  • But believing something because it’s expedient

  • or because it frees you from having to have any reasons at allcan still have its risks.

  • After all, if we can leap to God, we can also leap to Russell’s teapot, or to the Flying Spaghetti Monster.

  • Or, much worse, we could leap to particular beliefs about God

  • like that he wants us to deny rights to certain kinds of peopleor kill them.

  • These beliefs aren’t representative of the views of most theists, but the problem is,

  • if youre giving up on reasons and evidence, all beliefs are philosophically equal.

  • We count on evidence and justification to help us adjudicate between beliefs, to decide what we value.

  • If you throw that out, and fall back on faith alone, the sum of your religious arguments is going to end up being:

  • I have faith in the things I choose to have faith in.

  • And in that case, no one can tell anyone else that their belief is wrong,

  • or dangerous, or unjustified, because you can’t justify faith.

  • Today weve thought a bunch about about religious pragmatism and Pascal’s Wager,

  • and weve also learned about fideism and Kierkegaard’s leap to faith.

  • Next time were going to learn about existentialism, which is a movement Kierkegaard is considered to belong to.

  • But as we will see, existentialists can come in many different flavors.

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