Neither Angel nor Beast

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A01=Francis X.J. Coleman
Alexander VII
Antoine Singlin
Aquinas
Author_Francis X.J. Coleman
Blaise Pascal
Book III
Category=QDH
Category=QRAB
De Roannez
De Saci
Duc De Luynes
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
existential theology
Follow
Francis Coleman
French intellectual history
Holds
Holy Thorn
Jansenism studies
Leave Port Royal
Louis XIV
Mademoiselle
Mankind
Monsieur Pascal
Pascal's Father
Pascal's Life
Pascal's Provincial Letters analysis
Pascal's Works
Philippe De Champaigne
Pope Innocent X
Provincial Letters
religious epistemology
Rosy
scepticism
scepticism in science
seventeenth century France
seventeenth century philosophy
St Thomas Aquinas
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138976948
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 11 May 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Blaise Pascal began as a mathematical prodigy, developed into a physicist and inventor, and had become by the end of his life in 1662 a profound religious thinker. As a philosopher, he was most convinced by the long tradition of scepticism, and so refused – like Kierkegaard – to build a philosophical or theological system. Instead, he argued that the human heart required other forms of discourse to come to terms with the basic existential questions – our nature, purpose and relationship with God.

This introduction to the life and philosophical thought of Pascal is intended for the general reader. Strikingly illustrated, it traces the antithetical tensions in Pascal’s life from his infancy, when he was said to have been placed under the spell of a sorceress, to his final years of extreme asceticism. Pascal stressed both the misery and greatness of humanity, our finitude and our comprehension of the infinite. The book shows how his life, philosophical thought and literary style can best be understood in the light of the paradoxical view of human nature. It covers the methods of argument and the central issues of the Provincial Letters and of the Pensées; the Introduction places Pascal’s thought in the religious and political climate of seventeenth-century France, and a ‘Chronology of the Life of Pascal’ is also included.

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