Is every position in philosophy ultimately a bet or a gamble?
Given Munchhausen’s trilemma there is no way to absolutely justify anything. As stated, he thought these were the three ways to prove something:
The circular argument, in which the proof of some proposition presupposes the truth of that very proposition
The regressive argument, in which each proof requires a further proof, ad infinitum
The dogmatic argument, which rests on accepted precepts which are merely asserted rather than defended
And none of them seems to satisfy us. And given the nature of subjective probability, there seems to be no way to even partially justify anything. The very concept of partial justification cannot be justified. Even skepticism itself, arguably, cannot be justified!
So we’re left with positions that can never be justified (including possibly the position that nothing can be justified so don’t call this self contradictory).
If so, is everything ultimately a gamble? Sure, certain gambles I feel more sure of such as the sun rising tomorrow vs. there not being a god. But how can I justify the difference in certainty among these beliefs without resorting to further axioms that must themselves have their own level of subjective assuredness that would need to be justified?
I cannot help but think that in the cases where we think things are completely justified, it is often and purely because the instinct that we feel is shared by many and just “seems” more obvious. When it is not shared by many, we consider it more debatable. It seems like nothing more than a feeling.