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Pensées
8.5Blaise Pascal
GBM Assessment (Score: 8.5/10)
Pensées stands as one of the most profound and moving works of Christian apologetics ever written, though it survives only as an unfinished collection of fragments. Blaise Pascal's celebrated wager — arguing that belief in God represents the rational bet given the asymmetry of potential outcomes — anticipated the formal logic of game theory by centuries. The work is suffused with passages of extraordinary literary beauty, including the immortal declaration that "the heart has its reasons which reason does not know," a formulation that has resonated across philosophy, theology, and literature ever since.
Composed during the Counter-Reformation and published posthumously in 1670, Pensées represents the fragments of a grand defense of Christianity that Pascal never lived to complete. The wager it contains is now recognized as a pioneering exercise in probabilistic reasoning and decision theory, anticipating developments in game theory that would not be formalized for nearly three centuries. Pascal's fusion of mathematical rigor with spiritual passion profoundly influenced Kierkegaard and the existentialist tradition, establishing a model for philosophical writing that takes the lived experience of faith and doubt as seriously as abstract argumentation.
Revolution & Reason, c. 1651-1689
England beheads a king (1649). Hobbes writes Leviathan. Milton writes Paradise Lost blind and in disgrace. Pascal wages his wager with God. Spinoza constructs his Ethics. Louis XIV builds Versailles. England's Glorious Revolution produces Locke's blueprint for liberal democracy. Newton publishes his Principia (1687). The Scientific Revolution transforms understanding of nature.
Awards & Adaptations
Wager anticipated game theory. Core in philosophy/theology.
Recommended Edition
W.F. Trotter (1910)