1: Since you seem upset that I quoted the entire block of text the answer to that is probably in the affirmative.
How childish. Not only is it lazy, pointless and distracting, it also, as Hope pointed out only a day or two ago, creates headaches for posters who have sight problems and rely on screenreaders, of which we have at least two here to my certain knowledge.
2: I find with Gardner, given that he states there is no actual connection between people and the divine, it is a far greater mystery logically as to why he should be theist.........You have said nothing on that leading me to believe he has your support because he has ''been nice to atheists''.
I never mentioned anything to do with "being nice to atheists"; Gardner's intellectual honesty led him to state that as he saw it, it was and is true that on any rational, logical, intellectual basis theism is unjustified and unjustifiable, and that atheism/-ists have the better case and the stronger arguments. He has my support partly for being a dazzlingly intelligent man who wrote well on fascinating things and partly for being an honest theist, someone who openly, explicitly and baldly stated that for him theism could only be 'justified' on emotional grounds. (See also the more recent
Unapologetic by Francis Spufford for precisely the same thing). Gardner unashamedly stated that the guiding principle of his theism was
Credo consolans, which is to say, "I believe because it consoles/because it comforts." Gardner, like his hero Unamuno, thought that you can't get to a belief in a god, whether deistic or theistic, through rational thought, because rational thought gives it no support whatsoever. Like his other hero Kierkegaard, he thought that faith has to be irrational or a-rational, a blind leap into the dark because you can't get there (a god; life after death) from here (intellect and rational thought). Gardner's intellectual autobiography
The Whys of a Philosophical Scrivener is a fantastic book and, to my mind at any rate, a modern classic; I wish I could find it online so that I could copy the relevant passages, which here I'm having to do the long way from my paperback copy. Nevertheless, I'll do as much as I can:
What does it mean to say that belief in God works? To fideists it can mean only this - that belief in God is so emotionally rewarding, and the contrary belief so desolate, that they cannot not believe. Beneath the credo quia absurdum, as Unamuno said, is the credo quia consolans. I believe because it consoles me ... Whenever I speak of religious faith it will mean a belief, unsupported by logic or science, in both God and an afterlife. Bertrand Russell once defined faith, in a broader way, as "a firm belief in something for which there is no evidence." If "evidence" means the kind of support provided by reason and science, there is no evidence for God and immortality, and Russell's definition seems to me concise and admirable ... The true fideist grants it all. He may - in my opinion, should - go even another step, the ultimate step, in conceding points to the atheist. Not only are there no compelling proofs of God or an afterlife, but our experience strongly tells us that Nature does not care a fig about the fate of the entire human race, that death plunges each of us back into the nothingness that preceded our birth. Is there need to elaborate the obvious? ... I agree with Pierre Bayle and with Unamuno that when cold reason contemplates the world it find not only an absence of God, but good reasons for supposing that there is no God at all. From this perspective, from what Unamuno called "the tragic sense of life," from this despair, faith comes to the rescue, not only as something nonrational but in a sense irrational. For Unamuno the great symbol of a person of faith was his Spanish hero Don Quixote. Faith is indeed quixotic. It is absurd. Let us admit it. Let us concede everything! To a rational mind the world looks like a world without God. It looks like a world with no hope for another life. To think otherwise, to believe in spite of appearances, is surely a kind of madness ... I am quite content to confess with Unamuno that I have no basis whatever for my belief in God other than a passionate longing that God exist and that I and others will not cease to exist.
Martin Gardner,
The Whys of a Philosophical Scrivener, pp. 208-222.
Now, it seems to me that anybody prepared to say that they believe any given propositions, such as theism and posthumous survival,
solely because they are emotionally comforting is engaging in an act of willing self-deception and for all practical intents and purposes is 99% an atheist. And there is a whopping appeal to consequences hiding in plain sight here (
atheism is desolate; I would be unhappy if atheism were true and I were desolate; therefore I'll make myself happy by believing in God). Nevertheless, this degree of honesty is rare and deserves at least some credit.