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Search, rest, and grace in Pascal

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Abstract

For Pascal, how are human beings related, or how do they relate themselves, to the summum bonum in this life? In what sense do they share in it, and how do they come to share in it? These are questions that emerge in many ways in Pascal’s writing, significantly in his concept of repos. To answer these questions, especially by elucidating what repos is for human beings in this life, I would like to begin with Graeme Hunter’s “Motion and Rest in the Pensées”. Hunter’s account of Pascal is important because his purpose is to specifically address how certain aspects of modernity affect how Pascal understood repos. Hunter is certainly correct when he argues that for Pascal, repos is an orderly, directed seeking of truth—what Hunter designates as “search.” However, Hunter’s account of Pascal’s repos falls short of completion, because he neglects a crucial part of Pascal’s articulation of repos: his emphasis on the role of God’s grace in searching. By neglecting Pascal’s emphasis on grace, Hunter inadvertently depicts Pascal as reducing repos to motion, rather than envisioning them together in dialectical unity. I argue that for Pascal, it is correct to say that someone who is anxiously searching has indeed “already found,” but this cannot be solely due to human efforts: rather, it because the whole enterprise is entirely infused by grace.

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Notes

  1. p. 681. All in-text citations in this paper utilize Sellier’s fragment numbering from the following: Pascal and Ariew (2005).

  2. All the quotations in this paragraph are from fragment 681.

  3. (Rilke (1989), Second Elegy).

  4. (Rilke (1989), Eighth Elegy).

  5. Hunter (2000).

  6. (Rilke (1989), First Elegy).

  7. (Hunter (2000), p. 94).

  8. (Hunter (2000), p. 98).

  9. I will follow Hunter’s lead and use a variety of analogous concept-pairs to draw conclusions about repos and “search.” For example, throughout Hunter’s article he associates the Augustinian understanding of repos with concepts like “completeness,” “attainment,” “having found God, “knowing God, “a knowing God which entails serving God,” “certainty,” “happiness,” and “infinite.” On the contrary, he associates “search” with “seeking God,” “never wholly availing,” “probability,” and “finitude.”

  10. (Augustine and Outler (2002), Book IV., p. 57).

  11. (Popkin (1989), p. 15).

  12. Ibid., p. 6.

  13. Hammond (1994).

  14. See fragment 29 to see how Pascal denounces the lowest forms of “human” peace. The “internal war between reason and the passions has divided those who wanted peace into two sects,” and yet reason disturbs those (i.e. the Epicureans) who want to find peace only in passions, and the passions disturb those (i.e. the Stoics) who want to find peace only in reason. Pascal uses “repos” and “reposer” often in similar ways, specifically referring to human rest. For example, in 681 when he points out the monstrosity of those skeptics who “rest in ignorance,” and when he consequently exclaims that “whatever side he takes” –whether epicurean, or pyrrhonist, or stoic— “I will not leave him at rest.” Pascal will disturb the fake peace or rest of humanity so as to prepare them for a higher form of peace or rest that is a gift from God.

  15. Presumably, this union occurs in completion for the Christian after death, so the Christian eternally remains in perfect spiritual rest.

  16. See p. 164 where Pascal writes “n’y ayant point de certitude hors la foi sil l’homme est creé par un Dieu bon, par un démon méchant ou á l’aventure...” and in the very next sentence, “de plus, que personne n’a d’assurance—hors la foi—s’il veille ou s’il dort...”

  17. (Pascal and Popkin (1989b), p. 113).

  18. Ibid., p. 109.

  19. Ibid., p. 121.

  20. (Pascal and Popkin (1989a), p. 98).

  21. (Pascal and Popkin (1989b), p. 116).

  22. More fragments along these lines. 770: “What would the Jesuits be without probability, and probability without the Jesuits? Take away probability, and you can no longer please the world. Bring in probability, you can no longer displease it. It used to be difficult to avoid sins, and difficult to atone for them...” 746: “They have amusingly explained \(<\) la sûreté \(>\). For, after having established that all their paths are \(<\) sûres \(>\), they no longer call \(<\) sûr \(>\) the one that leads to heaven.”

  23. Pascal and Popkin (1989c).

  24. (Bernard and Evans (1987), p. 191).

  25. Pascal and Popkin (1989d).

  26. (Pascal and Popkin (1989e), p. 160).

  27. (Pascal and Popkin (1989e), p. 161).

  28. (Pascal and Popkin (1989c), p. 89).

  29. (Pascal and Popkin (1989c), p. 88).

  30. John 1:14.

  31. Pascal and Popkin (1989e).

  32. (Rilke (1989), Tenth Elegy).

References

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Correspondence to Jennifer L. Soerensen.

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Soerensen, J.L. Search, rest, and grace in Pascal. Int J Philos Relig 76, 19–40 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11153-014-9442-9

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