In the same chapter, the author talked about Blaise Pascal's life and his contribution to solve the combinatory problem by the now famous Pascal's Triangle.
Toward the end of Pascal's life, he completely transformed himself to a religious man, and "finally blasted off from planet Sanity." (Page 75) One of the products during this period was what's called Pascal's Wager, where he argued "the pros and cons of one's duty to God as if he were calculating mathematically the wisdom of a wager." (Page 76)
In another other book I read many years ago, the Pascal's Wager was said to be the "rational" arguement that has driven people en mass to Christianity. The Pascal Wager basically argued from the Expected Value angle. The key is that 1/2 of infinity is still infinity.
I never believed in his arguement but was not able to counter the idea in terms of expected value. Come to think of it now, the problem of his arguement is that not only the probability of God (as definited in the religious context) exists or not is not 50/50, the payoff is not infinity and the downside of believing not as trivial as "the sacrifices of piety." Or expressed as
EV = Prob * Positive Payoff + ( 1 - Prob) * Negative Payoff
Consider when Positive Payoff is not infinite, Negative Payoff is not trivial, & Prob is small enough...
[Some wise man said never to discuss religion or politics with your friends. In any case, the above can only serve as theoritical discussion. I learned many years ago that religion is emotional (taking a leap of faith), not rational (as in proving one way or the other.)]