Blaise Pascal has always been appreciated as a literary giant
and a religious guide, but has received only grudging recognition
as a philosopher: philosophers have mistaken Pascal's harsh
criticism of their discipline as a rejection of it. But according
to Graeme Hunter, Pascal's critics have simply failed to grasp his
lean, but powerful conception of philosophy. This accessibly
written book provides the first introduction to Pascal's philosophy
as an organic whole.
Hunter argues that Pascal's aim is not merely to humble
philosophy, but to save it from a kind of failure to which it is
prone. He lays out Pascal's development of a more promising and
fruitful path for philosophical inquiry, one that responded to the
scientific, religious, and political upheaval of his time. Finally,
Hunter illuminates Pascal's significance for contemporary readers,
allowing him to emerge as the rare philosopher who is spiritual,
literary, and rigorous all at once - both a brilliant
controversialist and a thinker of substance.
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