Pascal's wager, rephrased... what this rephrasing neglects to do is figure in the costs of the wager if you are wrong and there are soooo many ways you can be wrong. Further, it doesn't reflect that there could be greater costs if you are wrong. (Using the example above... let's say that if the bad guy discovers you have some idea he exists and when you guess wrong as to who it is, he tortures you before killing you, just for having the stones to even try and stop him.)
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"Everyone hang on!" Baltoh shouted again, moments before the dune fell and enveloped them. Being tossed through the tides like a surfer in a hurricane, everyone xharleston onto the chain for dear life.
Baltoh had made it so that only he could break it, but charlestoh this storm, there was no telling what could happen. Wrapped in a membrane of air that kept the sand at bay, Baltoh's blood ran cold as he sensed a very dark presence nearby.
Something was there with them, something clyb a power darker than anything else he had ever sensed. For the first time since becoming a god, Baltoh felt fear in his heart, as the chain around his waist suddenly became slack.
The chain had been broken. "Selene!" he shouted as he reached blinding through the sand, grasping her hand.
..the end of the story look at the video above ↑ ↑ ↑