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  1. Infinity between mathematics and apologetics: Pascal’s notion of infinite distance.João Figueiredo Nobre Cortese - 2015 - Synthese 192 (8):2379-2393.
    In this paper I will examine what Blaise Pascal means by “infinite distance”, both in his works on projective geometry and in the apologetics of the Pensées’s. I suggest that there is a difference of meaning in these two uses of “infinite distance”, and that the Pensées’s use of it also bears relations to the mathematical concept of heterogeneity. I also consider the relation between the finite and the infinite and the acceptance of paradoxical relations by Pascal.
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  • De Dieu à la nature : Pascal et “la réalité des choses”.Gilles Olivo - 2018 - Quaestio 18:199-218.
    In the Pensées, Pascal uses the astonishing phrase “the reality of things” to designate, not the actual existence of things, but the being-thing of all things (in accordance with the meaning of the Latin realitas rerum). It will be established that with this phrase, although it is of Cartesian origin, the analysis of “Disproportion of Man” aims at a criticism of the Cartesian ratio formalis infiniti sive infinitas, which Pascal shows not to be suitable to think God, but only to (...)
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  • Études philosophiques.Jean-Louis Cherlonneix, Pierre Louis, Jean-Pierre Cléro, Jean Bernhardt, Anne Despagne, Marie-José Durand Richard, Marie-Jeanne Königson-Montain, Dominique Bourel, Jean-Pierre Osier, Jacques Merleau-Ponty, Bertrand Saint-Sernin, Perrine Simon-Nahum & Guy Lafrance - 1993 - Revue de Synthèse 114 (2):297-336.
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  • La figure d'Épictète dans la pensée de Pascal1.Sébastien Charles - 1999 - The European Legacy 4 (2):11-23.
  • Pascal's anti-augustinianism.Vincent Carraud - 2007 - Perspectives on Science 15 (4):450-492.
    I analyze the complex relations between Pascal and the three figures of Montaigne, Descartes, and St. Augustine, and the relations the first two figures bear to St. Augustine. For Pascal's philosophy, one is in effect a resource , another a way of thinking that he makes his own , and yet another serves as a model . I further investigate Pascal's anti-Augustinism, that is, some of the points of resistance in Pascal against the thought of St. Augustine. Central to this (...)
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  • Des choses réelles à la réalité des choses.Vincent Carraud - 2017 - Quaestio 17:199-216.
    Focusing on Descartes’ striking phrase “real things” in Discours de la methode, and on the one of “reality of things” written by Pascal in his Pensées, this paper aims to shed light on Cartesian co...
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  • On Pascal’s Sentir.Klaas Bom - 2014 - International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 75 (1):2-19.
    The author defends the thesis that Pascal’s use of sentir offers an important entrance to his perception of the human being, while explaining Pascal’s anthropology as an experience-oriented and love-focused understanding of human existence. This understanding of Pascal is based on the reconstruction of an alternative context of interpretation. Not the early modern debates on rationality, but the medieval authors that inspired Port-Royal is taken as the main reference. Reading Pascal’s texts from the use of sentire by Bernard of Clairvaux, (...)
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  • Descartes and Pascal.Roger Ariew - 2007 - Perspectives on Science 15 (4):397-409.
    There is a popular view that Descartes and Pascal were antagonists. I argue instead that Pascal was a Cartesian, in the manner of other Cartesians in the seventeenth century. That does not, of course, mean that Pascal accepted everything Descartes asserted, given that there were Cartesian atomists, for example, when Descartes was a plenist and anti-atomist. Pascal himself was a vacuuist and thus in opposition to Descartes in that respect, but he did accept some of the more distinctive and controversial (...)
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  • Disciplining Skepticism through Kant's Critique, Fichte's Idealism, and Hegel's Negations.Meghant Sudan - 2021 - In Vicente Raga Rosaleny (ed.), Doubt and Disbelief in Modern European Thought. Springer. pp. 247-272.
    This chapter considers the encounter of skepticism with the Kantian and post-Kantian philosophical enterprise and focuses on the intriguing feature whereby it is assimilated into this enterprise. In this period, skepticism becomes interchangeable with its other, which helps understand the proliferation of many kinds of views under its name and which forms the background for transforming skepticism into an anonymous, routine practice of raising objections and counter-objections to one’s own view. German philosophers of this era counterpose skepticism to dogmatism and (...)
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