How many of you are actually chatbots?
How many of you are actually chatbots?
It’s interesting you bring up pascal’s wager, because the first time was introduced to me it was basically a clear-cut example of a logical fallacy. If you inverse it and say “anti-god will reward me for non-belief in god” the logic is equally valid, right?
So my response to this would be twofold.
1 (response to wager): I am here to interact with people. I do not derive joy when I am not talking to people. Because there is a nonzero possibility, I will discover I was talking to a bot, it is reasonable to assume I will eventually be unhappy, because I realized I was talking to one. Pascal’s wager doesn’t apply because there isn’t a post-state (life/death after) where I am happy. It is about whether or not. I am driving joy now.
2: it is reasonable to assume that the deployment of these bots may be intentionally malicious by some actors, even if we do not recognize it. So the net impact on my enjoyment of the site and my goal of human interaction may be reduced overtime steadily by these bots. Belief that they are human will not change that.
That's not the inverse of Pascal's Wager. "If p then q" has an inverse of "if not q then not p". Plus you need to take into account the premises of the argument. There's definitely a premise that if there is a god there is only one god. It doesn't hold up otherwise. So the inverse of "if there is a god, then living this way gets me a good afterlife" is "if I dont get an afterlife, there is no god." Which is still just fine. So there's no real logical fallacy. The only subjective component the cost of living such a way. If it costs you nothing, then the argument states you should definitely act as if there is a god. If it costs a lot, then it becomes less obvious. The Wager is based off the idea that you don't lose much by acting in accordance with the required lifestyle. It does ignore the concept that if there is a god, said god would likely have access to your thoughts and make it all moot.
That being said, I'm still an atheist. But my point is that if I don't know its a robot, I get the same result. Malicious actors can deploy bots, but there are also just as many malicious actors acting as trolls. So worrying about future unhappiness isn't worth it in my opinion.
Ok I'm going to sort of lay this out because I know what you're referring to but it's a distinct counter argument that's different from the one I'm bringing up.
We have no proof of god therefore we have 4 options:
However, conversely one can say (because we have no proof/evidence and are going with theoreticals and a mathematical approach:
Except that isn't a converse. It's relying on the false premise of another god. The inverse of god existing is God not existing. You're just making up a new proof that isn't the converse, inverse, or contrapositive. You're literally just saying what happens if there's a different god.
Pascal's wager suffers from faulty premise, not logical inconsistency. You're just doing a whole bunch of nonsense and extra work to say the same thing.
Yes, but your "not god" is simply a different deity. So it's a different proof. We're back to the faulty premise.
"God X" and "God Y" are equally valid assertions which violates the premise. I don't care that you call it "anti-God" since you're making it equivslent to a god and able to offer eternal rewards. Your entire logical argument is absurd. Pascal's wager is famously know for suffering from false premise of finite loss and infinite reward. All of the absurdity of the wager comes from the premises which you continually ignore.