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Glyn Hughes' Squashed Philosophers
The Condensed Edition of
Blaise Pascal's
Thoughts
on Religion
and Other Subjects
...in 5,700 words
"Man is but a reed, the most feeble
thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed."
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INTRODUCTION to PASCAL'S THOUGHTS
Mathematician, theologian, physicist and philosopher,
Blaise Pascal, was born in 1623 at Clermont-Ferrand, his
father being a judge and capable mathematician. Pascal's
mother died when he was only seven, and, having moved to
Paris, his father began a system of education in which
he would only allow Blaise to progress once he had
completely mastered a subject. Consequently, so it is
said, it was found that, at eleven, the boy had secretly
discovered for himself the first twenty-three
propositions of Euclid's geometry, calling straight
lines "bars" and circles "rounds."
His Thoughts are collected from scattered
notebooks after his death and are famous for introducing
'Pascal's Wager' - that you might as well bet that God
does exist, as, if you're right you'll get eternal life,
but if you lose, you lose nothing.
THE
VERY SQUASHED VERSION
If there is a God, He is infinitely
incomprehensible. We are then incapable of knowing
either what He is or if He is. This being so, who will
dare to undertake to decide the question? How,
therefore, shall Christians be blamed for not being able
to give reason for their belief, since they profess a
religion for which reason cannot be given? Do not, then,
reprove for error those who have made a choice; for you
know nothing about it. Yes; but you must wager. It is
not optional. You are in the game. Which will you choose
then? Let us weigh the gain and the loss in wagering
that God exists. If you gain, you gain all; if you lose,
you lose nothing. Wager, then, without hesitation that
He is. Labour to convince yourself, not by accumulating
proofs of God, but by weakening your passions. The
people who know the road which you would follow and are
healed of the ills of which you would be healed. They
began by acting in every way as if they believed, by
taking holy water, having masses said, and so on. This
will naturally make you believe and will stultify you.
This way leads you to faith, let me tell you that it
will lessen the passions which are your
stumbling-blocks. Now, what harm will befall you in
taking this side? You will be faithful, humble,
grateful, generous, a sincere friend, truthful.
Certainly you will not have those poisonous pleasures,
glory and luxury; but will you not have others?
Objection. Those who hope for salvation have
happiness in that; but they have as a counterpoise the
fear of hell. Reply. Who has most reason to
fear hell: he who is in ignorance whether there is a
hell, and who is certain of damnation if there is; or he
who certainly believes there is a hell and hopes to be
saved if there is?
ABOUT THIS SQUASHED VERSION
This abridgement is based on chapters I to IX
of the translation by WF Trotter. The aphorisms and
comments have been drastically reduced in number (down
from 98,000 words), but most are complete in themselves.
The squashed version may give the impression of a
coherence not pesent in the original, which was compiled
posthumously from scattered notes.
Thoughts
(Pensées)
By
Blaise Pascal, 1660
Squashed version edited by
Glyn
Hughes
© 2000
SECTION I
THOUGHTS ON MIND AND ON STYLE
-
1. The difference
between the mathematical and the intuitive mind. All
mathematicians would then be intuitive if they had
clear sight, for they do not reason incorrectly from
principles known to them; and intuitive minds would
be mathematical if they could turn their eyes to the
principles of mathematics to which they are unused.
-
-
3. Those who are
accustomed to judge by feeling do not understand the
process of reasoning, for they would understand at
first sight and are not used to seek for principles.
And others, on the contrary, who are accustomed to
reason from principles, do not at all understand
matters of feeling, seeking principles and being
unable to see at a glance.
-
-
4. To make light of
philosophy is to be a true philosopher.
-
-
7. The greater intellect
one has, the more originality one finds in men.
Ordinary persons find no difference between men.
-
-
10. People are generally
better persuaded by the reasons which they have
themselves discovered than by those which have come
into the mind of others.
-
-
12. Scaramouch, who only
thinks of one thing. The doctor, who speaks for a
quarter of an hour after he has said everything, so
full is he of the desire of talking.
-
-
15. Eloquence, which
persuades by sweetness, not by authority; as a
tyrant, not as a king.
-
-
17. Rivers are roads
which move, and which carry us whither we desire to
go.
-
-
19. The last thing one
settles in writing a book is what one should put in
first.
-
-
28. Symmetry is what we
see at a glance; based on the fact that there is no
reason for any difference, and based also on the
face of man; whence it happens that symmetry is only
wanted in breadth, not in height or depth.
-
-
42. To call a king
"Prince" is pleasing, because it diminishes his
rank.
-
-
44. Do you wish people
to believe good of you? Don't speak.
-
-
45. Languages are
ciphers, wherein letters are not changed into
letters, but words into words, so that an unknown
language is decipherable.
SECTION II
THE MISERY OF MAN WITHOUT GOD
-
66. One must know
oneself. If this does not serve to discover truth,
it at least serves as a rule of life, and there is
nothing better.
-
-
67. The vanity of the
sciences. Physical science will not console me for
the ignorance of morality in the time of affliction.
But the science of ethics will always console me for
the ignorance of the physical sciences.
-
-
71. Too much and too
little wine. Give him none, he cannot find truth;
give him too much, the same.
-
-
78. Descartes useless
and uncertain.
-
-
80. How comes it that a
cripple does not offend us, but that a fool does?
Because a cripple recognises that we walk straight,
whereas a fool declares that it is we who are silly;
if it were not so, we should feel pity and not
anger.
-
Imagination cannot make fools wise; but she can make
them happy
-
-
84. By imagination the
smallest objects of our life become affairs of
magnitude; and the greatest are ignominiously
brought to a low level; as is the case when we
discuss the Creator.
-
- 94.
The nature of man is wholly natural.
-
-
100. Self-love. The
Catholic religion does not bind us to confess our
sins indiscriminately to everybody; it allows them
to remain hidden from all other men save one, to
whom she bids us reveal the innermost recesses of
our heart and show ourselves as we are. There is
only this one man in the world whom she orders us to
undeceive, and she binds him to an inviolable
secrecy, which makes this knowledge to him as if it
were not. Can we imagine anything more charitable
and pleasant? And yet the corruption of man is such
that he finds even this law harsh; and it is one of
the main reasons which has caused a great part of
Europe to rebel against the Church.
-
-
102. Some vices only lay
hold of us by means of others, and these, like
branches, fall on removal of the trunk.
-
-
104. When our passion
leads us to do something, we forget our duty; for
example, we like a book and read it, when we ought
to be doing something else. Now, to remind ourselves
of our duty, we must set ourselves a task we
dislike; we then plead that we have something else
to do and by this means remember our duty.
-
-
106. By knowing each
man's ruling passion, we are sure of pleasing him;
and yet each has his fancies, opposed to his true
good, in the very idea which he has of the good. It
is a singularly puzzling fact.
-
- 111.
Inconstancy. We think we are playing on ordinary
organs when playing upon man. Men are organs, it is
true, but, odd, changeable, variable with pipes not
arranged in proper order.
-
-
120. Nature diversifies
and imitates; art imitates and diversifies.
-
-
122. Time heals griefs
and quarrels, for we change and are no longer the
same persons. Neither the offender nor the offended
are any more themselves. It is like a nation which
we have provoked, but meet again after two
generations. They are still Frenchmen, but not the
same.
-
-
129. Our nature consists
in motion; complete rest is death.
-
-
134. How useless is
painting, which attracts admiration by the
resemblance of things, the originals of which we do
not admire!
-
-
135. The struggle alone
pleases us, not the victory. We love to see animals
fighting, not the victor infuriated over the
vanquished. Likewise in plays, scenes which do not
rouse the emotion of fear are worthless, so are
extreme and hopeless misery, brutal lust, and
extreme cruelty.
-
-
136. A mere trifle
consoles us, for a mere trifle distresses us.
-
-
141. Men spend their
time in following a ball or a hare; it is the
pleasure even of kings.
-
-
148. We are so
presumptuous that we would wish to be known by all
the world, even by people who shall come after, when
we shall be no more; and we are so vain that the
esteem of five or six neighbours delights and
contents us.
-
-
150. Vanity is so
anchored in the heart of man that a soldier, a
soldier's servant, a cook, a porter brags and wishes
to have his admirers. Even philosophers wish for
them. Those who write against it want to have the
glory of having written well; and those who read it
desire the glory of having read it. I who write this
have perhaps this desire, and perhaps those who will
read it...
-
-
152. Pride. Curiosity is
only vanity. Most frequently we wish to know but to
talk. Otherwise we would not take a sea voyage in
order never to talk of it, and for the sole pleasure
of seeing without hope of ever communicating it.
-
-
154. I have no friends
to your advantage.
-
-
162. He who will know
fully the vanity of man has only to consider the
causes and effects of love. The cause is a je ne
sais quoi (Corneille), and the effects are
dreadful. This I-know-not-what, so small an object
that we cannot recognise it, agitates a whole
country, princes, armies, the entire world.
-
Cleopatra's nose: had it been shorter, the whole
aspect of the world would have been altered.
-
-
168. Diversion. As men
are not able to fight against death, misery,
ignorance, they have taken it into their heads, in
order to be happy, not to think of them at all.
-
- 171.
Misery. The only thing which consoles us for our
miseries is diversion, and yet this is the greatest
of our miseries.
-
-
176. Cromwell was about
to ravage all Christendom; the royal family was
undone, and his own for ever established, save for a
little grain of sand which formed in his ureter.
Rome herself was trembling under him; but this small
piece of gravel having formed there, he is dead, his
family cast down, all is peaceful, and the king is
restored.
-
-
180. The great and the
humble have the same misfortunes, the same griefs,
the same passions; but the one is at the top of the
wheel, and the other near the centre, and so less
disturbed by the same revolutions.
-
-
181. We are so
unfortunate that we can only take pleasure in a
thing on condition of being annoyed if it turn out
ill, as a thousand things can do, and do every hour.
He who should find the secret of rejoicing in the
good, without troubling himself with its contrary
evil, would have hit the mark. It is perpetual
motion.
-
-
183. We run carelessly
to the precipice, after we have put something before
us to prevent us seeing it.
SECTION III
OF THE NECESSITY OF THE WAGER
-
184. A letter to incite
to the search after God.
-
-
187. Order. Men despise
religion; they hate it and fear it is true. To
remedy this, we must begin by showing that religion
is not contrary to reason; that it is venerable, to
inspire respect for it; then we must make it
lovable, to make good men hope it is true; finally,
we must prove it is true.
-
-
189. To begin by pitying
unbelievers; they are wretched enough by their
condition. We ought only to revile them where it is
beneficial; but this does them harm.
-
- 194.
The immortality of the soul is a matter which is of
so great consequence to us and which touches us so
profoundly that we must have lost all feeling to be
indifferent as to knowing what it is. Surely then it
is a great evil to be in doubt, but it is at least
an indispensable duty to seek when we are in such
doubt; and thus the doubter who does not seek is
altogether completely unhappy and completely wrong.
-
-
195. Before entering
into the proofs of the Christian religion, I find it
necessary to point out the sinfulness of those men
who live in indifference to the search for truth in
a matter which is so important to them, and which
touches them so nearly.
-
-
196. Men lack heart;
they would not make a friend of it.
-
-
204. If we ought to
devote eight hours of life, we ought to devote a
hundred years.
-
-
206. The eternal silence
of these infinite spaces frightens me.
-
-
207. How many kingdoms
know us not!
-
-
212. Instability. It is
a horrible thing to feel all that we possess
slipping away.
-
-
213. Between us and
heaven or hell there is only life, which is the
frailest thing in the world.
-
-
217. An heir finds the
title-deeds of his house. Will he say, "Perhaps they
are forged" and neglect to examine them?
-
-
219. Undoubtedly the
question whether the soul is mortal or immortal must
have a profound influence on morals . And yet
philosophers have constructed their ethics
independently of this: they discuss to pass an hour.
-
-
221. Atheists ought to
say what is perfectly evident; now it is not
perfectly evident that the soul is material.
-
-
222. Atheists. What
reason have they for saying that we cannot rise from
the dead? What is more difficult, to be born or to
rise again; that what has never been should be, or
that what has been should be again? Is it more
difficult to come into existence than to return to
it? Why cannot a virgin bear a child? Does a hen not
lay eggs without a cock? What distinguishes these
outwardly from others? And who has told us that the
hen may not form the germ as well as the cock?
-
-
225. Atheism shows
strength of mind, but only to a certain degree.
-
-
226. Infidels, who
profess to follow reason, ought to be exceedingly
strong in reason. What say they then? "Do we not
see," say they, "that the brutes live and die like
men, and Turks like Christians? They have their
ceremonies, their prophets, their doctors, their
saints, their monks, like us," etc. (Is this
contrary to Scripture? Does it not say all this?)
-
-
228. Objection of
atheists: "But we have no light."
-
-
230. It is
incomprehensible that God should exist, and it is
incomprehensible that He should not exist; that the
soul should be joined to the body, and that we
should have no soul; that the world should be
created, and that it should not be created, etc.;
that original sin should be, and that it should not
be.
-
-
233. If there is a God,
He is infinitely incomprehensible, since, having
neither parts nor limits, He has no affinity to us.
We are then incapable of knowing either what He is
or if He is. This being so, who will dare to
undertake to decide the question? Not we, who have
no affinity to Him.
-
-
How, therefore, shall
Christians be blamed for not being able to give
reason for their belief, since they profess a
religion for which reason cannot be given? They
declare, when they show it to the world, that it is
a folly; are you, then, to complain that they do not
prove it? If they proved it, they would be
contradicting themselves; their good sense lies in
their having no proof. Do not, then, reprove for
error those who have made a choice; for you know
nothing about it. "No, but I blame them for having
made, not this choice, but a choice; for again both
he who chooses heads and he who chooses tails are
equally at fault, they are both in the wrong. The
true course is not to wager at all."
-
- Yes;
but you must wager. It is not optional. You are
embarked. You are in the game. Which will you choose
then? Let us see. Since you must choose, let us see
which interests you least. You have two things to
lose, the true and the good; and two things to
stake, your reason and your will, your knowledge and
your happiness; and your nature has two things to
shun, error and misery. Let us weigh the gain and
the loss in wagering that God exists. If you gain,
you gain all; if you lose, you lose nothing. Wager,
then, without hesitation that He is. "That is very
fine. Yes, I must wager; but I may perhaps wager too
much." Since there is an equal risk of gain and of
loss, if you had only to gain two lives, instead of
one, you might still wager. But there is here an
infinity of an infinitely happy life to gain, a
chance of gain against a finite number of chances of
loss "I confess it, I admit it. But, still, is there
no means of seeing the faces of the cards?" Yes,
Scripture and the rest, etc. "Yes, but I have my
hands tied and my mouth closed; I am forced to
wager, and am not free. I am not released, and am so
made that I cannot believe. What, then, would you
have me do?" My reply is this. What you say is quite
true. But you may learn from it. Labour to convince
yourself, not by accumulating proofs of God, but by
weakening your passions. You wish to arrive at the
faith, and you do not know the road; you wish to
cure yourself of infidelity, and you are asking for
remedies; learn, then, from those who have been
bound as you are, but now stake all their welfare;
they are the people who know the road which you
would follow and are healed of the ills of which you
would be healed. They began by acting in every way
as if they believed, by taking holy water, having
masses said, and so on. This will naturally make you
believe and will stultify you.
-
-
'But that is just what I
fear!' And why? What have you to lose?
-
-
But to show you that
this way leads you to faith, let me tell you that it
will lessen the passions which are your
stumbling-blocks.
-
-
The end of this
discourse. Now, what harm will befall you in taking
this side? You will be faithful, humble, grateful,
generous, a sincere friend, truthful. Certainly you
will not have those poisonous pleasures, glory and
luxury; but will you not have others? I will tell
you that you will thereby gain in this life, and
that, at each step you take on this road, you will
see so great certainty of gain, so much nothingness
in what you risk, that you will at last recognise
that you have wagered for something certain and
infinite, for which you have given nothing.
-
-
If this discourse
pleases you and seems impressive, know that it is
made by a man who has knelt, both before and after
it, in prayer to that Being, infinite and without
parts, before whom he lays all he has, for you also
to lay before Him all you have for your own good and
for His glory, that so strength may be given to
lowliness.
-
-
239. Objection. Those
who hope for salvation have happiness in that; but
they have as a counterpoise the fear of hell.
-
Reply. Who has most
reason to fear hell: he who is in ignorance whether
there is a hell, and who is certain of damnation if
there is; or he who certainly believes there is a
hell and hopes to be saved if there is?
SECTION IV
OF THE MEANS OF BELIEF
- 243.
It is an astounding fact that no canonical writer
has ever made use of nature to prove God. They all
strive to make us believe in Him. David, Solomon,
etc., have never said, "There is no void, therefore
there is a God." They must have had more knowledge
than the most learned people who came after them,
and who have all made use of this argument. This is
worthy of attention.
-
-
244. "Why! Do you not
say yourself that the heavens and birds prove God?"
No. "And does your religion not say so"? No. For
although it is true in a sense for some souls to
whom God gives this light, yet it is false with
respect to the majority of men.
-
- 245.
There are three sources of belief: reason, custom,
inspiration. The Christian religion, which alone has
reason, does not acknowledge as her true children
those who believe without inspiration.
-
-
251. Other religions, as
the pagan, are more popular, for they consist in
externals. But they are not for educated people. A
purely intellectual religion would be more suited to
the learned, but it would be of no use to the common
people. The Christian religion alone is adapted to
all, being composed of externals and internals. It
raises the common people to the internal, and
humbles the proud to the external; it is not perfect
without the two, for the people must understand the
spirit of the letter, and the learned must submit
their spirit to the letter.
-
-
255. Piety is different
from superstition.
-
-
256. I say there are few
true Christians, even as regards faith. There are
many who believe but from superstition. There are
many who do not believe solely from wickedness. Few
are between the two.
-
-
276. M. de Roannez said:
"Reasons come to me afterwards, but at first a thing
pleases or shocks me without my knowing the reason,
and yet it shocks me for that reason which I only
discover afterwards." But I believe, not that it
shocked him for the reasons which were found
afterwards, but that these reasons were only found
because it shocked him.
-
-
278. It is the heart
which experiences God, and not the reason. This,
then, is faith: God felt by the heart, not by the
reason.
-
-
288. Instead of
complaining that God had hidden Himself, you will
give Him thanks for not having revealed so much of
Himself; and you will also give Him thanks for not
having revealed Himself to haughty sages, unworthy
to know so holy a God.
SECTION V
JUSTICE AND THE REASON OF EFFECTS
-
319. How rightly do we
distinguish men by external appearances rather than
by internal qualities! Which of us two shall have
precedence? Who will give place to the other? The
least clever. But I am as clever as he. We should
have to fight over this. He has four lackeys, and I
have only one. This can be seen; we have only to
count. It falls to me to yield, and I am a fool if I
contest the matter. By this means we are at peace,
which is the greatest of boons.
-
-
320. The most
unreasonable things in the world become most
reasonable, because of the unruliness of men. What
is less reasonable than to choose the eldest son of
a queen to rule a State? We do not choose as captain
of a ship the passenger who is of the best family.
-
-
This law would be absurd
and unjust; but, because men are so themselves and
always will be so, it becomes reasonable and just.
For whom will men choose, as the most virtuous and
able? We at once come to blows, as each claims to be
the most virtuous and able. Let us then attach this
quality to something indisputable. This is the
king's eldest son. That is clear, and there is no
dispute. Reason can do no better, for civil war is
the greatest of evils.
-
-
327. The world is a good
judge of things, for it is in natural ignorance,
which is man's true state. The sciences have two
extremes which meet. The first is the pure natural
ignorance in which all men find themselves at birth.
The other extreme is that reached by great
intellects, who, having run through all that men can
know, find they know nothing, and come back again to
that same ignorance from which they set out; but
this is a learned ignorance which is conscious of
itself. Those between the two, who have departed
from natural ignorance and not been able to reach
the other, have some smattering of this vain
knowledge and pretend to be wise. These trouble the
world and are bad judges of everything. The people
and the wise constitute the world; these despise it,
and are despised. They judge badly of everything,
and the world judges rightly of them.
-
-
330. The power of kings
is founded on the reason and on the folly of the
people, and specially on their folly. The greatest
and most important thing in the world has weakness
for its foundation, and this foundation is
wonderfully sure; for there is nothing more sure
than this, that the people will be weak. What is
based on sound reason is very ill-founded as the
estimate of wisdom.
-
-
331. We can only think
of Plato and Aristotle in grand academic robes. They
were honest men, like others, laughing with their
friends, and, when they diverted themselves with
writing their Laws and the Politics, they did it as
an amusement. That part of their life was the least
philosophic and the least serious; the most
philosophic was to live simply and quietly. If they
wrote on politics, it was as if laying down rules
for a lunatic asylum; and if they presented the
appearance of speaking of a great matter, it was
because they knew that the madmen, to whom they
spoke, thought they were kings and emperors. They
entered into their principles in order to make their
madness as little harmful as possible.
SECTION VI
THE PHILOSOPHERS
-
358. Man is neither
angel nor brute, and the unfortunate thing is that
he who would act the angel acts the brute.
-
- 378.
Scepticism. Excess, like defect of intellect, is
accused of madness. Nothing is good but mediocrity.
-
-
385. Scepticism. Each
thing here is partly true and partly false.
Essential truth is not so; it is altogether pure and
altogether true. This mixture dishonours and
annihilates it. Nothing is purely true, and thus
nothing is true, meaning by that pure truth. You
will say it is true that homicide is wrong. Yes; for
we know well the wrong and the false. But what will
you say is good? Chastity? I say no; for the world
would come to an end. Marriage? No; continence is
better. Not to kill? No; for lawlessness would be
horrible, and the wicked would kill all the good. To
kill? No; for that destroys nature. We possess truth
and goodness only in part, and mingled with
falsehood and evil.
-
-
394. All the principles
of philosophers are true: the sceptics, the stoics,
the atheists and so on. But their conclusions are
false, because the opposite principles are also
true.
-
-
400. The greatness of
man. We have so great an idea of the soul of man
that we cannot endure being despised, or not being
esteemed by any soul; and all the happiness of men
consists in this esteem.
-
-
401. Glory. The brutes
do not admire each other. A horse does not admire
his companion. Not that there is no rivalry between
them in a race, but that is of no consequence; for,
when in the stable, the heaviest and most ill-formed
does not give up his oats to another, as men would
have others do to them. Their virtue is satisfied
with itself.
-
-
404. The greatest
baseness of man is the pursuit of glory. But is the
greatest mark of his excellence; for whatever
possessions he may have on earth, whatever health
and essential comfort, he is not satisfied if he has
not the esteem of men. He values human reason so
highly that, whatever advantages he may have on
earth, he is not content if he is not also ranked
highly in the judgement of man. This is the finest
position in the world. Nothing can turn him from
that desire, which is the most indelible quality of
man's heart.
-
- And
those who must despise men, and put them on a level
with the brutes, yet wish to be admired and believed
by men, and contradict themselves by their own
feelings; their nature, which is stronger than all,
convincing them of the greatness of man more
forcibly than reason convinces them of their
baseness.
-
-
406. Pride
counterbalances and takes away all miseries. Here is
a strange monster and a very plain aberration. He is
fallen from his place and is anxiously seeking it.
This is what all men do. Let us see who will have
found it.
-
-
409. The greatness of
man. The greatness of man is so evident that it is
even proved by his wretchedness. For what in animals
is nature, we call in man wretchedness, by which we
recognise that, his nature being now like that of
animals, he has fallen from a better nature which
once was his.
-
-
414. Men are so
necessarily mad that not to be mad would amount to
another form of madness.
-
-
418. It is dangerous to
make man see too clearly his equality with the
brutes without showing him his greatness. It is also
dangerous to make his see his greatness too clearly,
apart from his vileness. It is still more dangerous
to leave him in ignorance of both. But it is very
advantageous to show him both. Man must not think
that he is on a level either with the brutes or with
the angels, nor must he be ignorant of both sides of
his nature; but he must know both.
-
-
423. Contraries. Let man
now know his value. Let him love himself, for there
is in him a nature capable of good; but let him not
for this reason love the vileness which is in him.
Let him despise himself, for this capacity is
barren; but let him not therefore despise this
natural capacity. Let him hate himself, let him love
himself; he has within him the capacity of knowing
the truth and of being happy, but he possesses no
truth, either constant or satisfactory.
SECTION VII
MORALITY AND DOCTRINE
- All
men seek happiness. This is without exception.
-
427. Man does not know
in what rank to place himself. He has plainly gone
astray and fallen from his true place without being
able to find it again. He seeks it anxiously and
unsuccessfully everywhere in impenetrable darkness.
-
- 429.
The vileness of man in submitting himself to the
brutes and in even worshipping them.
-
-
433. After having
understood the whole nature of man. That a religion
may be true, it must have knowledge of our nature.
It ought to know its greatness and littleness, and
the reason of both. What religion but the Christian
has known this?
-
- 437.
We desire truth, and find only uncertainty; we seek
happiness and find only misery and death. It is
inevitable that we should wish for truth and
happiness; yet are we incapable of experiencing
either the one or the other. This we must consider
as a punishment, and a warning to show us from
whence we have fallen.
-
-
438. If man is not made
for God, why is he only happy in God? If man is made
for God, why is he so opposed to God?
-
-
446. Of original sin.
Ample tradition of original sin according to the
Jews. On the saying in Genesis 8:21: "The
imagination of man's heart is evil from his youth."
Rabbi Moses Haddarschan: "This evil leaven is placed
in man from the time that he is formed". Massechet
Succa: "This evil leaven has seven names in
Scripture. It is called evil, the foreskin,
uncleanness, an enemy, a scandal, a heart of stone,
the north wind; all this signifies the malignity
which is concealed and impressed in the heart of
man."
-
-
451. All men naturally
hate one another. They employ lust as far as
possible in the service of the public weal. But this
is only a pretence and a false image of love; for at
bottom it is only hate.
-
-
459. The rivers of
Babylon rush and fall and sweep away.
-
O holy Zion, where all
is firm and nothing falls!
-
We must sit upon the
waters, not under them or in them, but on them; and
not standing but seated; being seated to be humble,
and being above them to be secure. But we shall
stand in the porches of Jerusalem.
-
-
462. Search for the true
good. Ordinary men place the good in fortune and
external goods, or at least in amusement.
Philosophers have shown the vanity of all this and
have placed it where they could.
-
-
464. Philosophers. We
are full of things which take us out of ourselves.
-
-
465. The Stoics say,
"Retire within yourselves; it is there you will find
your rest."
-
And that is not true.
-
Others say, "Go out of
yourselves; seek happiness in amusement." And this
is not true. Illness comes.
-
Happiness is neither
without us nor within us. It is in God, both without
us and within us.
-
-
468. No other religion
has proposed to men to hate themselves. No other
religion, then, can please those who hate
themselves, and who seek a Being truly lovable. And
these, if they had never heard of the religion of a
God humiliated, would embrace it at once.
-
-
541. None is so happy as
a true Christian, nor so reasonable, virtuous, or
amiable.
-
- 549.
It is not only impossible but useless to know God
without Jesus Christ.
SECTION VIII
THE FUNDAMENTALS OF THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION
- 556.
Men blaspheme what they do not know. The Christian
religion consists in two points. It is of equal
concern to men to know them, and it is equally
dangerous to be ignorant of them. And it is equally
of God's mercy that He has given indications of
both.
-
-
561. There are two ways
of proving the truths of our religion; one by the
power of reason, the other by the authority of him
who speaks.
-
-
562. There is nothing on
earth that does not show either the wretchedness of
man, or the mercy of God; either the weakness of man
without God, or the strength of man with God.
-
-
565. Recognise, then,
the truth of religion in the very obscurity of
religion, in the little light we have of it, and in
the indifference which we have to knowing it.
-
-
568. Objection. The
Scripture is plainly full of matters not dictated by
the Holy Spirit. Answer. Then they do not harm
faith. Do you think that the prophecies cited in the
Gospel are related to make you believe? No, it is to
keep you from believing.
-
- 574.
Greatness. Religion is so great a thing that it is
right that those who will not take the trouble to
seek it, if it be obscure, should be deprived of it.
-
- 583.
The feeble-minded are people who know the truth.
SECTION IX
PERPETUITY
-
589. On the fact that
the Christian religion is not the only religion. So
far is this from being a reason for believing that
it is not the true one that, on the contrary, it
makes us see that it is so.
-
-
590. Men must be sincere
in all religions; true heathens, true Jews, true
Christians.
-
-
593. History of China. I
believe only the histories, whose witnesses got
themselves killed.
-
-
597. Against Mahomet.
The Koran is not more of Mahomet than the Gospel is
of Saint Matthew, for it is cited by many authors
from age to age. Even its very enemies, Celsus and
Porphyry, never denied it.
-
- The
Koran says Saint Matthew was an honest man.
Therefore Mahomet was a false prophet for calling
honest men wicked, or for not agreeing with what
they have said of Jesus Christ.
-
-
599. The difference
between Jesus Christ and Mahomet. Mahomet was not
foretold; Jesus Christ was foretold.
-
Mahomet slew; Jesus
Christ caused His own to be slain.
-
Mahomet forbade reading; the Apostles ordered
reading.
-
-
600. Any man can do what
Mahomet has done; for he performed no miracles, he
was not foretold. No man can do what Christ has
done.
-
- 601.
The heathen religion has no foundation at the
present day.
-
-
603. The Jewish religion
is wholly divine in its authority, its duration, its
perpetuity, its morality, its doctrine, and its
effects.

Blaise Pascal
1623-1662
Pascal's grave in Saint Etienne-Du-Mont, Paris

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