In "God's Wager: Pascal's Existential Gambling Problem," Sophia Blackwell delivers a hilarious and irreverent guide to Blaise Pascal, the 17th-century mathematician who invented probability theory, had a religious meltdown, and decided the smartest approach to God was to treat faith like a betting strategy.
With her signature blend of merciless mockery and surprising insight, Blackwell explores how this chronically ill hypochondriac somehow became one of history's most influential thinkers while:
By the end, you'll understand why Pascal's ideas about uncertainty, distraction, and existential dread feel shockingly relevant in our anxiety-ridden modern world-and why hedging your bets might be the most rational approach to an irrational universe.
Part of the bestselling "Cogito Ergo Nope!" series that makes philosophy accessible without making it boring.