Wagering on an Ironic God
Pascal on Faith and Philosophy
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Hardback
£40.00
Publisher: Baylor University Press
ISBN: 9781481306386
Number of Pages: 216
Published: 30/03/2017
Width: 15.4 cm
Height: 23.1 cm
Philosophers startle ordinary people. Christians astonish the philosophers.""
- Pascal, Pens?®es
In Wagering on an Ironic God Thomas S. Hibbs both startles and astonishes. He does so by offering a new interpretation of Pascal's Pens?®es and by showing the importance of Pascal in and for a philosophy of religion.
Hibbs resists the temptation to focus exclusively on Pascal's famous ""wager"" or to be beguiled by the fragmentary and presumably incomplete nature of Pens?®es. Instead he discovers in Pens?®es a coherent and comprehensive project, one in which Pascal contributed to the ancient debate over the best way of life - a life of true happiness and true virtue.
Hibbs situates Pascal in relation to early modern French philosophers, particularly Montaigne and Descartes. These three French thinkers offer distinctly modern accounts of the good life. Montaigne advocates the private life of authentic self-expression, while Descartes favors the public goods of progressive enlightenment science and its promise of the mastery of nature. Pascal, by contrast, renders an account of the Christian religion that engages modern subjectivity and science on its own terms and seeks to vindicate the wisdom of the Christian vision by showing that it, better than any of its rivals, truly understands human nature.
Though all three philosophers share a preoccupation with Socrates, each finds in that figure a distinct account of philosophy and its aims. Pascal finds in Socrates a philosophy rich in irony: philosophy is marked by a deep yearning for wisdom that is never wholly achieved. Philosophy is a quest without attainment, a love never obtained. Absent Cartesian certainty or the ambivalence of Montaigne, Pascal's practice of Socratic irony acknowledges the disorder of humanity without discouraging its quest. Instead, the quest for wisdom alerts the seeker to the presence of a hidden God.
God, according to Pascal, both conceals and reveals, fulfilling the philosophical aspiration for happiness and the good life only by subverting philosophy's very self-understanding. Pascal thus wagers all on the irony of a God who both startles and astonishes wisdom's true lovers.
- Pascal, Pens?®es
In Wagering on an Ironic God Thomas S. Hibbs both startles and astonishes. He does so by offering a new interpretation of Pascal's Pens?®es and by showing the importance of Pascal in and for a philosophy of religion.
Hibbs resists the temptation to focus exclusively on Pascal's famous ""wager"" or to be beguiled by the fragmentary and presumably incomplete nature of Pens?®es. Instead he discovers in Pens?®es a coherent and comprehensive project, one in which Pascal contributed to the ancient debate over the best way of life - a life of true happiness and true virtue.
Hibbs situates Pascal in relation to early modern French philosophers, particularly Montaigne and Descartes. These three French thinkers offer distinctly modern accounts of the good life. Montaigne advocates the private life of authentic self-expression, while Descartes favors the public goods of progressive enlightenment science and its promise of the mastery of nature. Pascal, by contrast, renders an account of the Christian religion that engages modern subjectivity and science on its own terms and seeks to vindicate the wisdom of the Christian vision by showing that it, better than any of its rivals, truly understands human nature.
Though all three philosophers share a preoccupation with Socrates, each finds in that figure a distinct account of philosophy and its aims. Pascal finds in Socrates a philosophy rich in irony: philosophy is marked by a deep yearning for wisdom that is never wholly achieved. Philosophy is a quest without attainment, a love never obtained. Absent Cartesian certainty or the ambivalence of Montaigne, Pascal's practice of Socratic irony acknowledges the disorder of humanity without discouraging its quest. Instead, the quest for wisdom alerts the seeker to the presence of a hidden God.
God, according to Pascal, both conceals and reveals, fulfilling the philosophical aspiration for happiness and the good life only by subverting philosophy's very self-understanding. Pascal thus wagers all on the irony of a God who both startles and astonishes wisdom's true lovers.
- Part One. Irony, Philosophy, and the Christian Faith
- Section 1. Pascal and the Ancient Quarrel over the Best Way of Life
- Section 2. Irony Rehabilitated
- Section 3. The Figure of Socrates in Early Modern Philosophy: Montaigne, Descartes, and Pascal
- Section 4. Divine Irony as an Alternative to Deism and Voluntarism
- Part Two. Socratic Immanence: Montaigne's Recovery of Philosophy as a Way of Life
- Section 1. Socratic Self-Knowledge
- and the Art of Living
- Section 2. Against Speculative Philosophy
- Section 3. Montaigne's Confessions
- Section 4. Death, Diversion, and the Supernatural
- Part Three. The Virtue of Science and the Science of Virtue: Descartes' Overcoming of Socrates
- Section 1. The Arts of Writing and the Science of Living
- Section 2. Recovering and Overcoming Socrates
- Section 3. Descartes' New Science of Virtue
- Section 4. Theology, Philosophical Irony, and the Arts of (Re-)Writing
- Part Four. The Quest for Wisdom: Pascal and Philosophy
- Section 1. Socrates and the Quest for the Good Life
- Section 2. Ironic Reversal: The Reduction of Cartesian Certitude to Socratic Amazement
- Section 3. Philosophy Deconstructed? Pascal Deconstructed?
- Section 4. The Restless Heart: Pascal's Residual Teleology
- Section 5. Pascal's Methods and the Quest for a Synoptic Vision
- Part Five. Wagering on an Ironic God
- Section 1. Rereading the Wager
- Section 2. Wagering as Self-Emptying
- Section 3. The Problem of Hope
- Section 4. Neither Deism nor Voluntarism
- Section 5. Christ as Eucharistic Cipher