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Pascal's Pensées

Chapter 956: INDEX
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About This Book

The work assembles unfinished meditations and aphorisms that probe the human condition, arguing that reason alone cannot resolve existential anxiety and that recognition of human wretchedness points toward the need for divine grace. It contrasts the misery of life without God with the happiness found through faith, offers a pragmatic argument for belief (the famous wager), critiques philosophical and moral complacency, and explores judgment, conversion, and prayer. The material is fragmentary but organized around theological apologetics and moral psychology, blending sharp rhetorical polemic with brief, concentrated reflections intended to move readers toward religious conviction.

[376] P. 269, l. 11. Probability.—The doctrine in casuistry that of two probable views, both reasonable, one may follow his own inclinations, as a doubtful law cannot impose a certain obligation. It was held by the Jesuits, the famous religious order founded in 1534 by Ignatius Loyola. This section of the Pensées is directed chiefly against them.

[377] P. 269, l. 22. Coacervabunt sibi magistros.—2 Tim. iv, 3.

[378] P. 270, l. 3. These.—The writers of Port-Royal.

[379] P. 270, l. 15. The Society.—The Society of Jesus.

[380] P. 271, l. 15. Digna necessitas.—Book of Wisdom xix, 4.


INDEX

The figures refer to the numbers of the Pensées, and not to the pages.