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Blaise Pascal
The Thoughts of Blaise Pascal
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4064066120597
Table of Contents
NOTES FOR THE GENERAL INTRODUCTION.
THE MISERY OF MAN WITHOUT GOD ;
THE GREATNESS AND LITTLENESS OF MAN.
OF THE DECEPTIVE POWERS OF THE IMAGINATION .
OF JUSTICE, CUSTOMS, AND PREJUDICES.
THE WEAKNESS, UNREST, AND DEFECTS OF MAN.
THE HAPPINESS OF MAN WITH GOD ;
THOUGHTS ON MAHOMET AND ON CHINA.
THE AUTHENTICITY OF THE SACRED BOOKS.
OF TYPES IN GENERAL AND OF THEIR LAWFULNESS.
THAT THE JEWISH LAW WAS FIGURATIVE.
OF THE TRUE RELIGION AND ITS CHARACTERISTICS.
THE EXCELLENCE OF THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION.
THE PERPETUITY OF THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION.
PROOFS OF THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION.
PROOFS OF THE DIVINITY OF JESUS CHRIST.
THE MISSION AND GREATNESS OF JESUS CHRIST.
OF THE TRUE RIGHTEOUS MAN AND OF THE TRUE CHRISTIAN.
PREFACE.
Those to whom the Life of Pascal and the Story of Port Royal are unknown, must be referred to works treating fully of the subject, since it were impossible to deal with them adequately within the limits of a preface. Sainte-Beuve's great work on Port Royal, especially the second and third volumes, and "Port Royal," by Charles Beard, B.A., London, 1863, may best be consulted by any who require full, lucid, and singularly impartial information.
But for such as, already acquainted with the time and the man, need a recapitulation of the more important facts, or for those who may find an outline map useful of the country they are to study in detail, a few words are here given.
Blaise Pascal was born at Clermont-Ferrand in Auvergne, on June 19, 1623. He sprung from a well-known legal family, many members of which had held lucrative and responsible positions. His father, Etienne Pascal, held the post of intendant, or provincial administrator, in Normandy, where, and at Paris previously, Pascal lived from the age of sixteen to that of twenty-five; almost wholly educated by his father on account of his precarious health. His mother died when he was eight years old. Etienne Pascal was a pious but stern person, and by no means disposed to entertain or allow any undue exaltation in religion, refusing as long as he lived to allow his daughter Jaqueline to take the veil. But he had the usual faiths and superstitions of his time, and believing that his son's ill-health arose from witchcraft, employed the old woman who was supposed to have caused the malady to remove it, by herbs culled before sunrise, and the expiatory death of a cat. This made a great impression on his son, who in the "Thoughts" employs an ingenious argument to prove that wonders wrought by the invocation of the devil are not, in the proper sense of