The life of the paradoxical seventeenth-century philosopher and
mathematician is examined here along three axes--psychological,
theological, and linguistic--to present the first rounded portrayal
of the querulous, intense, ever-committed Pascal. In drawing this
portrait, the author restores Pascal to the general reader after
twenty years of scholarship that has embroiled this historic
thinker in academic quarrels.
Robert Nelson confronts the contradictions in Pascal's life and
personality: intensely religious according to the demands of his
time, yet simultaneously committed to rigorous scientific inquiry,
no matter where it led; fascinated by rebellion, yet deeply
dependent on the authority of father, spiritual adviser, church,
and science. Mr. Nelson sees the resolution of these personal
dilemmas in Pascal's growing interest in language--the essential
relation between word and object, signifier and signified, which
form a style of "Pascalian linguistics" different from those of
Descartes or Port Royal.
Through the scrutiny of Pascal's biography and analysis of the
entire body of his writing, Nelson reveals Pascal the man, the
scientist, the theologian, and the literary genius.
General
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