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"In a major biography of Blaise Pascal, James Connor explores both the intellectual giant whose theory of probability paved the way for modernity and the devout religious mystic who dared apply probability to faith. A child prodigy, Pascal made essential additions to Descartes's work at age sixteen. By age nineteen, he had invented the world's first mechanical calculator. But despite his immense contributions to modern science and mathematical thinking, it is Pascal's wager with God that set him apart from his peers as a man fully engaged with both religious and scientific pursuits." "One night in 1654, Pascal had a visit from God, a mystical experience that changed his life. Struggling to explain God's existence to others, Pascal dared to apply his mathematical work to religious faith, playing dice with divinity: he argued for the existence of God, basing his position not on rigorous logical principles as did Aquinas or Anselm of Canterbury, but on outcomes - his famous wager. By applying to the existence of God the same rules that governed the existence and position of the universe itself, Pascal sounded the death knell for medieval "certainties" and paved the way for modern thinking."--Jacket.
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Pascal's wager: the man who played dice with God
2006, HarperSanFrancisco
in English
- 1st ed.
0060766913 9780060766917
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Pascal's Wager: The Man Who Played Dice with God
October 17, 2006, HarperOne
Hardcover
in English
0060766913 9780060766917
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Pascal's Wager: The Man Who Played Dice with God
October 17, 2006, HarperOne
in English
0060766913 9780060766917
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zzzz
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. 217-224).
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Work Description
"God does not play dice," said Albert Einstein, but he was wrong. The universe is a probability equation, and the boiling clouds of time are best described by chaos theory, rooted in chance. The laws of probability were first set down by Blaise Pascal, the seventeenth-century mathematician, physicist, and mystic, who discovered that "choosing" is the human condition.A child prodigy, Pascal was to the mathematical sciences what Mozart was to music. Besides establishing the laws of probability, Pascal also invented the mechanical calculator, pioneered mathematical theroms and fine-tuned the scientific method, became a polemicist against the Jesuits, and penned literary works one of which Voltaire described as "the best-written book that has yet appeared in France." But also like Mozart, Pascal's genius would all too quickly burn him up, dying just after his thirty-ninth birthday.One night in 1654, Pascal had a visit from God, a mystical experience that changed his life. Never the dull rationalist, Pascal applied his mathematical work to religious faith and played dice. He argued for the existence of God, not based on rigorous logical principles like Aquinas or Anselm of Canterbury, but on outcomes--his famous wager. By placing the existence of God under the same rules as the existence and position of an electron, as tomorrow's thunderstorm, as the universe itself, Pascal sounded the death knell for Medieval "certainties" and paved the way forward to the new world of modern science.Pascal's Wager is the biography of a man and his revolutionary idea.
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| May 1, 2025 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
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