I've been reading about some of the recent debates that Christopher  Hitchens has been having or will be having with people like his brother  and Tony Blair. Apparently the debate or discussion focus has shifted  from a direct question about God's existence to the practical effects of  religious belief.  I'm not sure if the debate is supposed to have  anything to do with the question of God's existence, but let's suppose,  for the sake of argument that it does.
If it does, one might contend that it's an odd claim, i.e., whether or  not a belief  X has good practical effects isn't what should inform  whether or not we believe it.  We should believe X based on whether or  not we have evidence for X.  If I believe that my wife is cheating on me  that may end up having negative practical effects that could harm our  marriage, but nonetheless, I should base my belief in this matter on the  evidence that I have, not the effects that I want to see.    Similarly,  can one actually choose whether or not to have a belief based on  anything other than evidence?  For example, it seems that I can't choose  whether or not to believe that Ottawa is the capital of Canada, it's  just something about which I have knowledge based on evidence.  You can  offer me $1000 if I'll stop believing it, but I'll only be able to  pretend I don't believe it, I won't actually be able to stop believing  it. 
However, it's worth thinking about American pragmatism in  this regard.  Pragmatism sees belief as something other than just the  degree of psychological certainty we have with respect to some  proposition based on some reliable epistemic process. Rather, belief can  be a matter of the will.  It's not unreasonable, according to  pragmatists,  to choose to believe X even if we don't feel certain about  it.  William James gives the mountain pass example.  A climber is caught in the mountains and must get down before night  fall.  He doubts his ability to jump a chasm but convinces himself that  it's possible, despite a lack of evidence and in choosing that belief  actually manages to give himself the requisite confidence to make the  jump.  Bas van Fraassen is a voluntarist  with respect to  belief  contending that one can choose to believe X over Y even if one  doesn't feel as certain about X as they feel about Y.  Of course, this  all hearkens back to Pascal's Wager.  Pascal famously argued that even if you don't feel very confident in  God's existence, you should choose to believe in God anyway because  there's not much to lose in so believing and much to gain if you  actually do believe.  Decision theory shows us the way.  Pascal assures  that we can simply act as if we find the belief compelling and it will  become compelling.  But the key is that we choose what to believe, not  because of the evidence we have at hand but because of the positive  benefits of holding the belief.
So, now let's consider Hitchens's  discussions of the effects of religious belief.  We might actually  consider this as reworking of the decision theoretic data that's  factored into Pascal's wager.  In fact, if religious belief has a  significantly detrimental effect overall and if, in fact, the  probability of an afterlife is very small (although one might contend if  the overall benefit is infinite, because one would live forever, than  it can become almost vanishingly small and still be reasonable, but  let's set that aside), then the wager comes out the other way.  If the  effects of believing aren't negligible, then belief itself, in the  absence of solid data for or against may well compel us to reject the  belief rather than accept it. 
 

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