'Books saved me. Despair, stupidity, cowardice, boredom. The great texts hoist us above ourselves, enlarge us to the dimensions of a republic of the mind.'
- Blaise Pascal
INTRODUCTION
It might seem that about Blaise Pascal, and about the two works on which his fame is founded, everything that there is to say had been said. The details of his life are as fully known as we can expect to know them; his mathematical and physical discoveries have been treated many times; his religious sentiment and his theological views have been discussed again and again; and his prose style has been analysed by French critics down to the finest particular. But Pascal is one of those writers who will be and who must be studied afresh by men in every generation. It is not he who changes, but we who change. It is not our knowledge of him that increases, but our world that alters and our attitudes towards it. The history of human opinions of Pascal and of men of his stature is a part of the history of humanity. That indicates his permanent importance.
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T. S. Eliot.
PASCAL'S PENSÉES
INTRODUCTION BY
T. S. ELIOT
A Dutton Paperback
https://www.gutenberg.org/files/18269/18269-h/18269-h.htm