“Pascal makes no attempt in this most famous argument to show that his Roman Catholicism is true or probably true. The reasons which he suggests for making the recommended bet on his particular faith are reasons in the sense of motives rather than reasons in the sense of grounds. Conceding, if only for the sake of the present argument, that we can have no knowledge here, Pascal tries to justify as prudent a policy of systematic self-persuasion, rather than to provide grounds for thinking that the beliefs recommended are actually true.”
Quote by Antony Flew
Author
You May Also Like
Source: Merely Mortal?: Can You Survive Your Own Death?
Source: God, freedom, and immortality: a critical analysis
“Sudden conversion ... is particularly attractive to the half-baked mind.”
“The chimps love holidays - in fact Tatu actually anticipates them and asks about them.”
