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Pascal Blaise (1623-62),
French philosopher, mathematician, and physicist, considered one of
the great minds in Western intellectual history.
Pascal was born in Clermont-Ferrand on June 19, 1623, and his family
settled in Paris in 1629. Under the tutelage of his father, Pascal soon
proved himself a mathematical prodigy, and at the age of 16 he
formulated one of the basic theorems of projective geometry, known as
Pascal s theorem and described in his Essai pour les coniques (Essay on
Conics, 1639). In 1642 he invented the first mechanical adding machine.
Pascal proved by experimentation in 1648 that the level of the mercury
column in a barometer is determined by an increase or decrease in the
surrounding atmospheric pressure rather than by a vacuum, as previously
believed. This discovery verified the hypothesis of the Italian
physicist Evangelista Torricelli concerning the effect of atmospheric
pressure on the equilibrium of liquids. Six years later, in conjunction
with the French mathematician Pierre de Fermat, Pascal formulated the
mathematical theory of probability, which has become important in such
fields as actuarial, mathematical, and social statistics and as a
fundamental element in the calculations of modern theoretical physics.
Pascal s other important scientific contributions include the derivation
of Pascal s law or principle, which states that fluids transmit
pressures equally in all directions, and his investigations in the
geometry of infinitesimals. His methodology reflected his emphasis on
empirical experimentation as opposed to analytical, a priori methods,
and he believed that human progress is perpetuated by the accumulation
of scientific discoveries resulting from such experimentation.
Later Life and Works
Pascal espoused Jansenism and in 1654 entered the Jansenist community at
Port Royal, where he led a rigorously ascetic life until his death eight
years later. In 1656 he wrote the famous 18 Lettres provinciales
(Provincial Letters), in which he attacked the Jesuits for their
attempts to reconcile 16th-century naturalism with orthodox Roman
Catholicism. His most positive religious statement appeared posthumously
(he died August 19, 1662); it was published in fragmentary form in 1670
as Apologie de la religion Chrétienne (Apology of the Christian
Religion). In these fragments, which later were incorporated into his
major work, he posed the alternatives of potential salvation and eternal
damnation, with the implication that only by conversion to Jansenism
could salvation be achieved. Pascal asserted that whether or not
salvation was achieved, humanity s ultimate destiny is an afterlife
belonging to a supernatural realm that can only be known intuitively.
Pascal s final important work was Pensées sur la religion et sur
quelques autres sujets (Thoughts on Religion and on Other Subjects),
also published in 1670. In the Pensées Pascal attempted to explain and
justify the difficulties of human life by the doctrine of original sin,
and he contended that revelation can be comprehended only by faith,
which in turn is justified by revelation. Pascal s writings urging
acceptance of the Christian life contain frequent applications of the
calculations of probability; he reasoned that the value of eternal
happiness is infinite and that although the probability of gaining such
happiness by religion may be small it is infinitely greater than by any
other course of human conduct or belief. A reclassification of the
Pensées, a careful work begun in 1935 and continued by several
scholars, does not reconstruct the Apologie, but allows the reader to
follow the plan that Pascal himself would have followed.
Evaluation
Pascal was one of the most eminent mathematicians and physicists of his
day and one of the greatest mystical writers in Christian literature.
His religious works are personal in their speculation on matters beyond
human understanding. He is generally ranked among the finest French
polemicists, especially in the Lettres provinciales, a classic in the
literature of irony. Pascal s prose style is noted for its originality
and, in particular, for its total lack of artifice. He affects his
readers by his use of logic and the passionate force of his dialectic.
Contributed by:
Wallace Fowlie
"Pascal, Blaise," Microsoft (R) Encarta. Copyright (c) 1994 Microsoft
Corporation. Copyright (c) 1994 Funk & Wagnall s Corporation.
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