PASCAL, BLAISE

blĕz päskälˈ, 1623–62, French scientist and religious philosopher. Studying under the direction of his father, a civil servant, Pascal showed great precocity, especially in mathematics and science. Before he was 16 he wrote a paper on conic sections which won the respect of the mathematicians of Paris; at 19 he invented a calculating machine. Credited with founding the modern theory of probability, Pascal also discovered the properties of the cycloid and contributed to the advance of differential calculus. In physics his experiments increased knowledge of atmospheric pressure through barometric measurements and of the equilibrium of fluids (see Pascal's law). As a young man, Pascal came under the influence of Jansenism, and in 1651 his sister Jacqueline, who had also embraced Jansenist beliefs, entered the convent at Port-Royal, the center of the movement. As a result of the death of his father and of his own narrow escape from death, Pascal in 1654 experienced what he called a "conversion" and thereafter turned much of his attention to religion. When Antoine Arnauld, a noted Jansenist, was attacked by the Jesuits, Pascal championed him in his Lettre escrite à un provincial (1656). Those Provincial Letters, rendered into Latin, quickly circulated throughout Europe, and they still hold a leading place in the literature of polite irony. Pascal's religious writings were posthumously published as Pensées de M. Pascal sur la religion et sur quelques autres sujets (1670). For a modern edition see Thoughts: An Apology for Christianity (tr. 1955). In the Pensées, famous both as a religious and philosophical classic, Pascal states his belief in the inadequacy of reason to solve man's difficulties or to satisfy his hopes. He preached instead the final necessity of mystic faith for true understanding of the universe and its meaning to man.

See biographies by A. J. Krailsheimer (1980), H. H. Davidson (1983); studies by E. Cailliet (1944, repr. 1973), R. Hazelton (1974), and S. E. Melzer (1986).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Pascal Blaise  - 2322 results

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...portrait of the whole Pascal in Blaise Pascal: The Life and Work of a Realist...The inner drama in the life of Blaise Pascal consisted, on the one hand in...nature and to the Church , Blaise Pascal came to realise, in the hour...
...5 namely, the ascension of Blaise Pascal. From a distance of some three...Maurice, "Les Enfances de Blaise Pascal", in La Revue hebdomadaire...standard edition: OEUVRES DE BLAISE PASCAL publiees suivant lordre chronologique...
...Pierre, 1606-1684-Criticism and interpretation. 5. Pascal, Blaise, 1623-1662-Criticism and interpretation. 6. Racine...Corneille and the Erotic Contract 25 2 Liberti Dei: Pascal's Fundamentalism and the Politics of Grace 61...
...difficult and challenging thinker. Blaise Pascal (1623 62) occupies a position...Research. He is also the author of Blaise Pascal: In Praise of Vanity (1998...PASCALS MATHEMATICAL WORK In 1631 Blaise Pascals father Etienne (himself an able...
...bibliographical references and index. 1. Pascal, Blaise, 1623-1662. Pensees. 2. God -- Proof -- History of doctrines. 3. Pascal, Blaise, 1623-1662 -- Knowledge -- Neoplatonism...of Knowledge and a Good Bet BLAISE PASCAL BELIEVED THAT ONE OUGHT TO WAGER...
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journal articles on: Pascal Blaise  - 139 results

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...with the legacy of the great Jansenist Catholic writer, Blaise Pascal, whose Pensees we know Patmore read2 and which he conspicuously...University Microfilms International, 1961). (3.) Blaise Pascal, Pensees, trans. A. J. Krailsheimer (New York: Penguin...
Between Pascal and Mallarme: Fausts Speculative Moment...eyes of two poet-theorists of chance, Pascal and Mallarme. Little critical attention...inverts the wager proposed in the 1660s by Pascal.6 Every individuals life, Pascal argues...
...and Pascal," 282. The Pascal is from Pensees, no. 131, in the section called "The Misery of Man Without God." (38) Blaise Pascal, Pensees, no. 131. As cited in Voegelin, "Nietzsche and Pascal," 283. Elsewhere Voegelin says that television is an...
...Dynamic Social Impact by Pascal Huguet, Universite Blaise Pascal, CNRS, and Bibb Latane, Florida Atlantic University...Charge de Recherche for the Life Sciences at Universite Blaise Pascal in Clermont-Ferrand, France, and Bibb Latane is a...
...Kafka, Barthes, and Foucault Le moi est haissable. ( Pascal 351 ) Comfort-Technology-Asceticism T here is something...himself . . . we should hate the other when he himself, like Pascal, finds himself hateful. (Nietzsche; qtd. in Barthes, Lovers...
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magazine articles on: Pascal Blaise  - 60 results

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...In that setting Blaise Pascal (1623-1662) emerges...emotion; and there too Pascal strikes a remarkably...of his father, son Blaise struck upon the idea...sister Gilberte. Blaises father had assumed...the story points to Pascals universally acknowledged...
...inspirations and influences: the polymath Blaise Pascals epistemological distinction between...indebted for initial insights to Pascal, James, Whitehead, and Hayes, Barzun...as in the 1946 Swift essay: "Like Pascal, Swift compels us to go through...
...Wager by Herb Silverman Blaise Pascal (1623-1662) and Herb Silverman (1942...respective wagers. Though a Christian, Pascal was also a doubter. In Number 233...knowing either what He is or if He is." Pascal later went on to say, "Reason can...
...Cover-ups by Fleming Rutledge Psalm 85 BLAISE PASCAL evokes a sense of existential dread in this famous line...more challenging task in theology than interpreting it. Pascal and Auden both interpret it as silence--Deus absconditus...
...Arts of Darkness, philosopher Thomas Hibbs nominates Blaise Pascal, who enters the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences...together to view noir through a religious lens. Fade in on Blaise Pascal, seventeenth-century mathematician, inventor, and lay...
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newspaper articles on: Pascal Blaise  - 29 results

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...pivotal correspondence between Blaise Pascal and Pierre de Fermat in the mid-1700s...the famous French mathematician Blaise Pascal sat at his desk and composed a...can do that, not even if you are Blaise Pascal, a child prodigy who at sixteen...
...NORMAN THE 17th century French mathematician Blaise Pascal is probably best known for "Pascals Wager" - that one should affect belief in God...consider believing in God for reasons other than Pascals insurance policy. That such a device should...
...TV show, to use maths to track the position of a ball on a roulette wheel? Ian, via e-mail The French mathematician Blaise Pascal, famous for his work in probability, invented the roulette wheel in the 17th Century. Many gamblers since then have...
...Channel he didnt speak a word of the language. But today he teaches English as a foreign language at the University Blaise Pascal. When teaching things to his students, he says he has a tendency to explain it in French. "When I came here I had...
...German writer) to the sobering ("Man is in a strict sense entirely animal" -- French mathematician and philosopher Blaise Pascal). The title of booklet is taken from Shakespeares Coriolanus: "What is the City but the People?" Mr Deller said: "I...
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encyclopedia articles on: Pascal Blaise  - 17 results

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PASCAL, BLAISE blez paskal , 1623 62, French scientist...direction of his father, a civil servant, Pascal showed great precocity, especially in mathematics...founding the modern theory of probability, Pascal also discovered the properties of the cycloid...
PASCALS LAW for Blaise Pascal , states that pressure applied to a confined fluid at any point is transmitted undiminished throughout the fluid in all directions...
...Lat. omnibus =for all, large public conveyance. A horse-drawn urban omnibus was introduced in Paris in 1662 by Blaise Pascal and his associates, but it remained in operation for only a few years. The omnibus reappeared c.1812 in Bordeaux, France...
...with developing scientific thought. Rene Descartes and other philosophers (e.g., Baruch Spinoza, G. W. Leibniz, and Blaise Pascal) sought to retain the belief in the existence of innate (a priori) ideas together with an acceptance of the values...
...the traditional metaphysical approaches to man and his place in the universe. Thinkers such as St. Thomas Aquinas, Blaise Pascal, and Friedrich Nietzsche have been called existentialists, but it is more accurate to place the beginnings of the movement...
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