Surprised not to find Pascal’s wager linked to this discussion since he faced the same crisis of belief. It’s well known he chose to believe because of the enormous (inf?) rewards if that turned out to be right, so he was arguably hedging his bets.
It’s less well known that he understood it (coerced belief for expediency’s sake) to be something that would be obvious to omniscient God, so it wasn’t enough to choose to believe, but rather he actually Had To. To this end he hoped that practice would make perfect and I think died worrying about it. this is described in the Wikipedia article in an evasive third person, but a philosophy podcast I heard attributed the dilemma of insincere belief to Pascal directly.
Surprised not to find Pascal’s wager linked to this discussion since he faced the same crisis of belief. It’s well known he chose to believe because of the enormous (inf?) rewards if that turned out to be right, so he was arguably hedging his bets.
It’s less well known that he understood it (coerced belief for expediency’s sake) to be something that would be obvious to omniscient God, so it wasn’t enough to choose to believe, but rather he actually Had To. To this end he hoped that practice would make perfect and I think died worrying about it. this is described in the Wikipedia article in an evasive third person, but a philosophy podcast I heard attributed the dilemma of insincere belief to Pascal directly.
Fun stuff.