Beyond the Wager (eBook)

The Christian Brilliance of Blaise Pascal
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2024 | 1. Auflage
224 Seiten
IVP Academic (Verlag)
978-1-5140-0179-0 (ISBN)

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Beyond the Wager -  Douglas Groothuis
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Blaise Pascal, the seventeenth-century French philosopher and scientist, is perhaps best known for his 'wager,' an argument about the existence of God. But there was much more to Pascal and his brilliance. In this accessible and well-documented study, philosopher Douglas Groothuis introduces readers to Pascal's life as well as the breadth of his intellectual pursuits, including his contributions to mathematics, science, ethics, and theology. Groothuis overviews the key points of Pascal's Pensées, which captures his thoughts about God, humanity, and Jesus Christ. Readers will also explore Pascal's views on a range of topics, including culture, politics, Islam, and miracles. Often quoted and often misunderstood, Pascal is a complex figure whose writings have charmed, puzzled, and inspired readers across the centuries. With guidance from a leading Christian thinker and longtime student of Pascal, Beyond the Wager takes you on a journey to discover the riches Pascal has to offer today.

Douglas R. Groothuis (Ph.D., Philosophy, University of Oregon) is professor of philosophy at Denver Seminary in Denver, Colorado. He has written several books, including Truth Decay, In Defense of Natural Theology (coeditor), Jesus in an Age of Controversy, The Soul in Cyberspace, and Christian Apologetics.

Douglas Groothuis (PhD, University of Oregon) is professor of philosophy at Denver Seminary. He is the author of numerous books, including Christian Apologetics, Fire in the Streets, Philosophy in Seven Sentences, Truth Decay, and Walking Through Twilight. He has written for scholarly journals including Religious Studies, Sophia, Research in Philosophy and Technology, Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society, and Philosophia Christi, as well as for numerous popular magazines.

Blaise Pascal: Known and Unknown


SCIENTIST, INVENTOR, PHILOSOPHER, MYSTIC, and theologian, Blaise Pascal (1623–1662) is more often quoted (or misquoted) than understood. Strangely, he is both well-known and largely unknown. Although he may appear in books of famous quotations more frequently than other philosophers, histories of philosophy often omit any reference to him,1 and anthologies typically feature only his famous wager fragment, in which he recommends betting on God’s existence in view of the costs and benefits involved. Consequently, some of the most invigorating and vexing of his ideas are hidden.

Many know that the computer language “Pascal” is named after the man who invented the first calculator, but few know of his revolutionary philosophy of science, his other scientific achievements, his probing reflections on ethics, his apologetic for Christianity, or his piercing reflections on the enigmas of human nature. He has been rejected as a misanthrope (Voltaire) and hailed as a universal genius by many, myself included. Few philosophers, outside Augustine and Kierkegaard, have had their writings mined for Christian devotional reading, but one can read Daily Readings with Blaise Pascal.2

Despite his notability and ongoing influence, some have taken Pascal to be an irrationalist who pitted faith against reason, a misanthrope who deemed humans to be vile and worthless, and one who in later life abandoned and condemned the scientific pursuits in which he once excelled. The truth, however, is much more complex—and much more interesting and rewarding. I hope this volume will stimulate many readers to join the ongoing conversation with this French polymath as he muses over God, the uniqueness of Christianity, the paradoxes of the human condition, and the powers and limits of science, morality, the meaning of life, and spirituality.

Whatever we make of Pascal, few who know anything about him will doubt his brilliance as a mathematician, scientist, and prose stylist. I will argue he was a brilliant philosopher as well. His intellectual excellence was not vagabond, as was Nietzsche’s. Nor was it rooted in the ego that craves a philosophy worthy of one’s own name, as was Rousseau’s. No, Pascal’s brilliance was a Christian brilliance.

THE HEART OF PASCAL


Pascal’s most enduring work, Pensées, is a collection of posthumously published fragments that Pascal had intended to become part of a book defending the Christian religion. It was proposed to be a thorough apologetic. These fragments have been assembled in several arrangements, none of which provides a clearly linear or systematic development of his viewpoints. Therefore, some approach Pascal with a smorgasbord sensibility. Various memorable and arresting aphorisms and epigrams are snatched up, pondered, and even savored, but often at the expense of knowing what they mean or how they fit into the larger puzzle of Pascal’s philosophy. Consider this curiously luminous sentence: “The heart has its reasons of which reason knows nothing: we know this in countless ways” (423/277).3 Scores have been entranced by the poetic and paradoxical ring of this sentence. But what did Pascal mean by it?

Some have taken “reasons of the heart” to refer to an irrational, emotional, or otherwise arbitrary preference or orientation. If so, so much the worse for Pascal. If “reasons of the heart” are bereft of rational justification, then they cannot be subject to logical evaluation. They would be either nonrational (such as a sneeze or wheeze) or irrational (such as believing in unicorns or centaurs). This is no position for a philosopher to take. Or did Pascal have something very different in mind—something more subtle, profound, and complex? Could the same man who amazed all of Europe with his mathematical and scientific abilities disengage the head entirely for “reasons of the heart”? We will explore this later in the book.

Many think that Pascal was a fideist: one who divorces faith and reason and finds no rational support for religious belief. One might claim that in matters of mathematical calculation and scientific experimentation Pascal employed reason and observation, but in the realm of religion, he took another course. Some of his statements—taken by themselves and out of context—can indeed be read in this way. “It is the heart which perceives God and not the reason. That is what faith is: God perceived by the heart, not by reason” (424/278).4

For Pascal, belief in God, the church, and the Christian Scriptures meant far more than assenting to the conclusion of a complex argument; faith involved submitting the core of one’s being to a supernatural being who calls one into a transformational encounter and an ongoing engagement. On the other hand, Pascal, in the last few years of his life, proposed to write a reasoned defense of the Christian religion (Apology for the Christian Religion), which would win over the skeptics and unbelievers of his day to Christian commitment. One of the fragments from that intended work was so bold as to claim, “One of the ways in which the damned will be confounded is that they will see themselves condemned by their own reason, by which they claimed to condemn the Christian religion” (175/563).5

When Pascal laid out the strategy for this defense of Christianity, he did not dispense with reason as a tool for commending faith; he did not lay aside his prodigious intellectual skills by abandoning rational argumentation. Consider his program for his proposed apology.

Order. Men despise religion. They hate it and are afraid it may be true. The cure for this is to show that religion is not contrary to reason, but worthy of reverence and respect. Next make it attractive, make good men wish it were true, and then show that it is. Worthy of reverence because it really understands human nature. Attractive because it promises true good. (12/187)6

Some of Pascal’s most memorable and oft-repeated sayings concern the strangeness and wonder of the human condition. But these were never offered as snippets of wisdom without purpose. They fit integrally into Pascal’s claim that Christianity is “worthy of reverence because it really understands human nature.” Pascal applied his considerable philosophical and rhetorical skills to that end, relying on the biblical account of human nature as his guide.

WAS PASCAL A PHILOSOPHER?


Pascal’s essentially religious or theological outlook has led some commentators to exclude his work from that of philosophy proper or to judge his work as poor philosophy. Some have argued that the title “philosopher” should be used to designate only those who speculate widely and systematically, and who appeal only to human reason apart from any consideration of divine revelation or awareness of a religious mission. But this prejudices the case against the entire stream of influential religious thinkers who have pondered reality deeply and logically in light of their spiritual convictions. It also prejudges the case against less systematic and nonreligious thinkers such as Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900). Any definition of philosophy that excludes in principle Augustine, Anselm, Kierkegaard, or Martin Buber—passionate religious believers as well as earnest, vigilant thinkers—is surely defective and should be discarded.

Nevertheless, Pascal did not approach philosophy as a vocation. His renown in his day came from his genius as mathematician, physicist, and inventor. His religious writings concerned theological disputes (with the Jesuits over morality) and apologetics (the defense of the Christian faith as objectively true and rationally credible). Nevertheless, there was no little philosophizing in Pascal’s writings, especially throughout Pensées. Although he did not develop a systematic philosophy (as did Descartes, for example), it is unfair to rank him as merely a minor philosopher. In Pascal, one finds a developed philosophy of religion and philosophy of science. His thoughts are too large and penetrating for dismissing him as a non-philosopher or as a minor one.7

Since Pascal did not leave us with a final systematic statement of his philosophy, we must reconstruct his views from a set of published polemical letters on theology (The Provincial Letters), personal correspondence, several works on science, some scattered essays, and Pensées. Although many have wondered what sort of finished work of philosophy Pascal would have left us, the lack of a well-organized, detailed philosophy affords the earnest reader some advantages.

As they stand, the many absorbing and arresting fragments of the Pensées furnish us with raw materials for an intellectual adventure concerning our uneasy place in an often-perplexing cosmos, self, and culture. Unlike the more methodical philosophers, such as Descartes, Pascal in many cases does not finish a line of thought for us. Instead, he initiates an intellectual pursuit that we are left to follow up on—or ignore. Some of the fragments of Pensées are not arguments at all but evocative parables meant to trigger a new kind of awareness.

Imagine a number of men in chains, all under sentence of death, some of whom are each day butchered in the sight of the others; those remaining see their own condition in that of their...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 2.4.2024
Verlagsort Lisle
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Literatur Biografien / Erfahrungsberichte
Literatur Romane / Erzählungen
Sachbuch/Ratgeber Geschichte / Politik
Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Allgemeines / Lexika
Schlagworte Blaise Pascal • Christian college textbook • Christian Philosophy • french philosopher • Introduction • intro to philosophy • Pascal's Wager • Pensees • philosophical figure • philosophy 101 • Scientist
ISBN-10 1-5140-0179-9 / 1514001799
ISBN-13 978-1-5140-0179-0 / 9781514001790
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