The wager fragment in Blaise Pascal's "Pensees "opens with the
phrase ""infini rien""--"infinite nothing"--which is meant to
describe the human condition. Pascal was responding to what was,
even in the seventeenth century, becoming a pressing human problem:
we seem to be able to know much about the world but less about
ourselves.
The traditional European view of human beings as creatures made
in the image of God and potentially capable of a mystical union
with God was increasingly confounded by the difficulty of finding
God in nature. Despite his own scientific work, however, Pascal
argued that if one does not know whether or not God exists, one
should bet that he does: if one is right the rewards are infinitely
good and, if one is wrong, what one has lost is, by comparison,
utterly trivial.
The argument behind this wager is one of the most
celebrated--and disputed--in the history of philosophy. It has been
seen in terms of the calculus of probabilities, as a piece of
religious apologetic, as an event in the religious and
psychological life of Pascal himself, and as an event in the life
of the Jansenist movement and its various expressions at
Port-Royal.
In this book, Leslie Armour explores the underlying logic of
ideas brought to the surface by the intersection of two
philosophical lines of thought. He shows that Pascal had come to
philosophy by way of two particular strands of Platonism, one
strongly mystical, associated with the founder of the French
Oratorian order, Pierre de Berulle, and the other the Augustinian
Platonism associated with Duvergier de Hauranne and Cornelius
Jansen. At the same time Pascal was engaged in an internal struggle
with skepticism. While he agreed that it is difficult to find God
in physical nature, he disagreed with the claim that we know
nothing of nature. The problem is that the human being is both
infinite and nothing.
Thus, Armour locates Pascal's wager within the confluence of a
vital neo-Platonism and an intellectually powerful skepticism. He
concludes that even today, "If we must act and cannot know enough,
we must bet."