Hello.
Thomas Westbrook here.
Have you ever wondered, “Isn’t atheism
risky?
What if you’re wrong?”
In the mid 1600s, mathematician Blaise Pascal
posited the following paraphrased argument
for belief in God.
If God exists, it's far safer to believe in
him.
The rewards are eternal, and if you're wrong,
you lose nothing, but if you don't believe
and are wrong, the cost is too great.
There are so many things wrong with Pascal’s
Wager that I’m always surprised that people
still use it today.
First off, he assumes that you can choose
what you believe.
If I don’t see evidence for god, I can’t
choose to believe one exists any more than
I can choose to believe that my friend Danny
is an Xbox controller.
I can lie and say I do, but even if I did,
an all knowing-god would see right through
me, and would probably appreciate an honest
lack of belief far more than insincere bet-hedging.
And with over 4,000 known gods mankind has
concocted, what makes you think you’re worshipping
the right one and not just the one you like?
Sure, a billion protestants and Catholics
really dig their god, but Allah’s passing
out virgins, and the Mormons came up with
one that gives you a planet when you die.
His popularity has really taken off.
What if you’re praying to the wrong god,
and every time you go to church and tithe,
you’re just pissing her off?
If a god created the universe, I think he’d
be confident enough to get by just fine without
perpetual brown-nosing.
He wouldn’t go hungry without prayers, and
he wouldn’t need an ego boost.
It’s incredibly arrogant to think that a
god capable of creating this universe would
be entirely centered around our small planet,
and more specifically: me?
And if it's so crucial that you believe, wouldn't
an omniscient, loving god reveal himself to
you in a targeted way that he knows will convince
you?
Doubt-free, naive belief without evidence
is such a dumb way to determine salvation
anyways, especially for the hide-and-seek
champion of the universe.
I certainly don’t believe in the Christian
God any more than I do the Egyptian, Norse,
or Aztec gods.
Yahweh and Allah are just the flavor-of-the-month.
With all of their failed prophecies, internal
scriptural contradictions, scientific and
historical inaccuracies, and sanctioning of
immoral acts of violence, choosing one of
these deities would be one of the worst, most
illogical choices anyone could make.
And the stakes get even higher when you add
science to the equation.
We have no empirical proof of god.
Every supernatural claim that has been thoroughly
tested has been thoroughly debunked.
Our understanding of the cosmos is lightyears
ahead of what it used to be, even just ten
years ago, and is growing exponentially every
day as we gather more data, and unlock better
ways to observe the universe.
Whether you've kept up with it or not, scientists,
independently, across multiple disciplines
have been piecing together the origins of
life and the universe, from a hundred trillionths
of a second after the big bang to the formation
of stars, then planets, to abiogenesis and
the evolution of life itself.
Everything points to a universe from nothing,
and the gaps for God are getting smaller and
smaller and smaller.
Adding an even more complex god to the mix
only complicates the equation with unnecessary
and unproven assumptions.
So tell me, with every god we know of being
pitifully small and man-made, and as the possibility
for any deity shrinks to a minuscule afterthought.
Does it really make sense to take this bet?
And it's not without cost.
If following and serving one of these gods
means wasting precious time in this short
and singular life; if it means diverting time
and money away from scientific advancement
and towards regressive religious institutions;
if it means throwing our lives away in a holy
grail-style quest for the non-existent or
allowing for suffering, division, and bigotry
in hopes of an increasingly-unlikely divine
reward, then the cost to take this wager is
far higher than anyone in their right mind
should be willing to take.
It would be like selling your family for an
already scratched off lottery ticket from
a guy in an unmarked van who swears it's the
winning ticket.
Sure, we can't know with 100% certainty that
no god exists, and for that reason, we should
all technically be agnostic, but due to the
sheer improbability of it, I give no more
credence to the Judeo-Christian god than to
Odin or Osiris.
In regards to how I live my life, I'm an atheist
towards all gods.
They're all highly improbable.
As an agnostic atheist, I create my own purpose
and carve my own path.
Live a good life - there probably is no god.
And if there is, and she's just, then your
humanism and sincere quest for truth, love,
and the betterment of others will be enough.
And if there's not a god, it's still enough.
Do good for its own sake, because we're good
people.
Let's make this world better, because we want
to live in a better world, not because we're
scared little worms hedging a bet.
Please like and share this and support me
on Patreon if you can.
Y’all rock!
Don't waste your only life.
And don't drink the Koolaid!
