Main article: Pensées
Pascal's most influential theological work, referred to posthumously as the Pensées
("Thoughts"), was not completed before his death. It was to have been a
sustained and coherent examination and defense of the Christian faith,
with the original title Apologie de la religion Chrétienne
("Defense of the Christian Religion"). The first version of the numerous
scraps of paper found after his death appeared in print as a book in
1669 titled Pensées de M. Pascal sur la religion, et sur quelques autres sujets ("Thoughts of M. Pascal on religion, and on some other subjects") and soon thereafter became a classic. One of the Apologie's main strategies was to use the contradictory philosophies of skepticism and stoicism, personalized by Montaigne on one hand, and Epictetus on the other, in order to bring the unbeliever to such despair and confusion that he would embrace God.Pascal's Pensées is widely considered to be a masterpiece, and a landmark in French prose. When commenting on one particular section (Thought #72), Sainte-Beuve praised it as the finest pages in the French language.[29] Will Durant hailed it as "the most eloquent book in French prose".[30] In Pensées, Pascal surveys several philosophical paradoxes: infinity and nothing, faith and reason, soul and matter, death and life, meaning and vanity – seemingly arriving at no definitive conclusions besides humility, ignorance, and grace. Rolling these into one he develops Pascal's Wager.
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