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Pascal on Justice, Force, and Law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2009

Extract

This paper focuses on Pascal's controversial pronouncements on justice, force and law. It proceeds, in light of a preliminary examination of historical context, questions of textual interpretation, and Pascal's method and study of man, to show in Pascal's thought a theory of law which (a) rejects rationalist and naturalist explanations, (b) incorporates positivism and by implication what is today called “historicism,” and (c) transcends both positivism and historicism dialectically in a Christocentric biblical view of cosmic order.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Notre Dame 1984

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References

1 Voltaire, , Lettres Philosophiques (1734), Lettre XXV, “Remarques sur les pensées de M. Pascal”;Google ScholarChateaubriand, , Le Genie du Christianisme (Paris, 1863), p. 373;Google ScholarSuares, , Notre Pascal (Paris, 1923), p. 65;Google ScholarCrocker, , Nature and Culture (Baltimore, 1963), p. 36;Google ScholarMaritain, , Ransoming the Time (New York, 1946), p. 33;Google ScholarLöwith, , “Man Between Infinities,” Measure (Summer, 1950), p. 303;Google ScholarGoldmann, , Le Dieu Caché (Paris, 1956),Google Scholar translated as The Hidden God (New York, 1964);Google ScholarMortimer, , Blaise Pascal; the Life and Work of a Realist (New York, 1959);Google ScholarCassirer, , An Essay on Man (New York, 1956), p. 26.Google Scholar

2 In referring to the Pensées in this paper, the first number listed is that of the edition of Louis Lafuma, translated by Krailsheimer, A. J., Pascal, Pensées (London, 1966);Google Scholar the second number refers to the traditional listing in, Brunschvicg, LeonOeuvres de Blaise Pascal, 14 vols. (Paris, 19041921), vols. 12–14.Google Scholar In a few instances I have made corrections in the translation. In this paper the edition of Pascal's works which will be cited is that of Jacques Chevalier, published by the Bibliotheque de la Pleiade in 1954 as Pascal: Oeuvres Completes. Consult the following for previous writing on the subject of this paper: Maritain, Jacques, “La Politique de Pascal” in Reflexions sur l' intelligence et sur sa vie propre (1923), pp. 160–73,Google Scholar published in English as cited above in Ransoming the Time, pp. 3351.Google Scholar Maritain contends that in Pascal “the Jansenist theory of a corrupted nature, an imperious zeal for experience, a reaction against a reason (Pascal's own) which is rationalist,” conspires “to divert him from any consideration of the divine norms hidden in the depths of nature.” As a result “there can be here on earth only ties of force and opinion subject to the caprice of men and to the accidents of the historical process.” This finds its “unhappy realization in the enlightened despotism of the next century.” Chevalier, Jacques, Pascal (London, 1930), pp. 198218, 311–15,Google Scholar attempts to reconcile the dual notion of justice in Pascal's thought. Guardini, Romano, Pascal in Our Time (New York, 1966),Google Scholar stresses Pascal's existentialism, its structure, the place therein of norms and law, and the sociological problem in the Christian consciousness. Brimo, Albert, Pascal et le Droit (Paris, 1942),Google Scholar approaches Pascal not in terms of political ideas but of legal theory, maintaining that “between St. Thomas and modern positivism, there is only one antirationalist and antinaturalist doctrine, which is that of Pascal.” Baudin, E., La Philosophie de Pascal, 3 vols. (Neuchatel, 19461947),Google Scholar is a broad Thomistic, critical treatment of Pascal's thought which in reference to Pascal's view of justice (vol. 2, part 2) holds that “he is guilty of intentionally using the same word to signify things he plainly regards as entirely different,” and that he does not properly appreciate philosophic dogmatism. Lerch, Emil, “Pascal's Gedanken uber Recht und Gerechtigkeit” in Zeitschrift für Schweizerisches Recht (1941), pp. 339–64.Google ScholarChinard, Gilbert, En Lisant Pascal (Lille, 1948),Google Scholar is particularly valuable for its discussion of the relationship of Pascal's thought to that of Hobbes. Auerbach, Eric, “Uber Pascal's Politische Theorie,” in Vier Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der Franzosischen Bildung (Bern, 1951),Google Scholar translated as “On the Political Theory of Pascal” in Auerbach, , Scenes from the Drama of European Literature (New York, 1959), pp. 101129.Google Scholar This is a close analysis of fragment 103 (298). Goldmann, Lucien, Le Dieu Caché,Google Scholar see particularly chapter 14. This work is revelatory of background sociological forces and attempts to interpret the Pensees in light of Marx, but particularly Lukacs, to render Pascal an exponent of a “tragic” world view and an “all or nothing” attitude. Mortier, Roland, “Les Idees Politiques de Pascal,” Revue d'Histoire Litteraire de la France, 58 (0709., 1958), 289–96.Google Scholar Mortier attempts to answer those who criticize Pascal's thought as leading to advocacy of complete passive obedience, raison d'état, and no safeguards against tyranny and nihilisim, by placing in evidence the dialectical, polemical, complex character of Pascal's thought which can easily be misconstrued when interpreted unilaterally. Dariosecq, Luc, “La Pensée Politique de Pascal,” PMLA, 86 (03, 1961) 5462,CrossRefGoogle Scholar argues that Pascal's thought provides no real safeguard against tyranny and harbors disdain for the people at large. Keohane, Nannerl O., Philosophy and the State in France (Princeton, 1980), 262–80,CrossRefGoogle Scholar places Pascal in historical context, gives a good general description of his political ideas, conception of man, notion of community, and relation to his contemporaries.

3 Miel, , Pascal and Theology (Baltimore, 1969), p. 134.Google Scholar

4 Grotius, Hugo, On War and Peace (London, 1982), XX 5, vi.Google Scholar For background and context see, besides Keohane, , Philosophy and State;Google ScholarPopkin, R. H., A History of Scepticism (New York, 1964);Google ScholarSpink, J. S., French Free-Thought from Gassendi to Voltaire (New York, 1969);Google ScholarKrailsheimer, A. J., Studies in Self-Interest from Descartes to La Bruyere (Oxford, 1962);Google ScholarKrailsheimer, A. J., Pascal (New York, 1980);Google ScholarBroome, J. H., Pascal (New York, 1964);Google ScholarNelson, Robert J., Pascal: Adversary and Advocate (Cambridge, Mass., 1981);CrossRefGoogle ScholarTopliss, PatriciaThe Rhetoric of Pascal (Amsterdam, 1966);Google ScholarMesnard, Jean, Pascal: L'Homme et L'Oeuvre (Paris, 1951);Google ScholarBrimo, Albert, Les Grands Courants de la Philosophie du Droit et de L'Etat (Paris, 1968);Google ScholarChurch, Wm. F., “The Decline of the French Jurists as Political Theorists,” French Historical Studies, 5 (Spring 1967), 140;CrossRefGoogle ScholarRommen, Heinrich, The Natural Law (St. Louis, 1947);Google ScholarLöwith, Karl, “Man Between Infinities”;Google ScholarBrehier, Emile, The History of Philosophy: The Seventeenth Century (Chicago, 1966);Google ScholarMiel, , Pascal and Theology.Google Scholar

5 257 (684).

6 Krailsheimer, , Pascal, pp. 43, 44.Google Scholar

7 905 (385); 699 (382); 449 (556); 257 (684); 270 (670); 265 (677); 260 (678); 697 (383); 417 (548).

8 Voegelin, Eric, From Enlightenment to Revolution (Durham, N.C., 1975), 68;Google Scholar 532 (373); Löwith, , “Man Between Infinities”, p. 298.Google Scholar

9 170 (268); 551 (2); 512 (1); 513 (4).

10 933 (460); 308 (793); Baird, A. W. S., Studies in Pascal's Ethics (The Hague, 1975), 113, 8595.CrossRefGoogle Scholar See also La Porte, Jean, Le Coeur et la Raison selon Pascal (Paris, 1950).Google Scholar

11 199 (72); 418 (233); 406 (395); 131 (434); 188 (267); 44 (82).

12 687 (144); 6 (60).

13 199 (72); 68 (205); 198 (693); 201 (206); 418 (233); 131 (434).

14 200 (347); 113 (348); Löwith, , “Man Between Infinities,” p. 302;Google Scholar 131 (434).

15 759 (346); 620 (146); 756 (365); 678 (358); 199 (72).

16 Jonas, , The Gnostic Religion (Boston, 1958), p. 324.Google Scholar

17 641 (129); 419 (419); 125 (92); 126 (93); 821 (252); 622 (131); 597 (455). See the following divisions in the Lafuma edition (Krailsheimer, translator, Vanity, 13–52, Wretchedness, 53–76, Boredom, 77–79, Diversion, 132–140.

18 806 (147); 470 (404); 792 (101); 210 (451); 211 (453); 118 (402); 688 (323); 978 (100); 411 (400).

19 “Entretien de Pascal avec Saci sur Epictete et Montaigue,” Oeuvres Completes, pp. 560–74;Google Scholar 149 (430); 192 (527); 397 (426); 695 (445); 449 (556); 208 (435); 148 (428); 360 (482); 372 (483); 142 (463); 143 (464); 144 (360); 145 (461); 146 (350); Krailsheimer, , Studies in Self-interest, pp. 144, 148;Google ScholarMiel, , Pascal and Theology, pp. 187, 192.Google Scholar

20 Ibid., p. 160; Baird, , Studies in Pascal's Ethics, pp. 710, 93;Google ScholarMorot-Sir, Edouard, La Metaphysique de Pascal (Presses Universitaines de France, 1973), pp. 5658.Google Scholar

21 520 (375).

22 “Entretien,” Oeuvres Completes, p. 574;Google Scholar 418 (233); “Preface pour le Traite du Vide,” ibid., p. 529; 421 (477).

23 Auerbach, , “On the Political Theory of Pascal,” p. 102.Google Scholar

24 Ibid., pp. 123–25.

25 Ibid., pp. 103–114, 122, 126.

26 Brimo, , Pascal et le Droit, p. 11.Google Scholar

27 Ibid., p. 167; 60 (294); 97 (334); Guardini, , Pascal in Our Time, p. 85;Google Scholar 81 (299); 85 (878).

28 60 (294); 66 (326); 645 (312).

29 828 (304); 525 (325); 60 (294).

30 797 (310); 974 (949); Brimo, , Pascal et le Droit, p. 31;Google ScholarEllul, Jacques, The Theological Foundation of Law (New York, 1960), p. 91.Google Scholar

31 828 (304); 60 (294); 977 (320); 94 (313); 977 (320); 30 (320); 797 (310); 744 (18).

32 Brimo, , Pascal et le Droit, p. 30.Google Scholar

33 525 (325); 60 (294); 83 (327); 90 (337); 92 (335); 93 (328); 94 (313); 95 (316); 101 (324); Brimo, , Pascal el le Droit, pp. 32, 47.Google Scholar

34 60 (294); 83 (327).

35 90 (337); Brimo, , Pascal et le Droit, p. 33;Google Scholar 647 (35); Morot-Sir, , Metaphysique de Pascal, pp. 100113;Google ScholarKeohane, , Philosophy and State, pp. 283–89;Google ScholarSpink, , French Free-Thought, p. 9.Google Scholar

36 90 (337); Brimo, , Pascal et le Droit, pp. 33, 34, 48;Google ScholarDariosecq, , “La Pensée Politique de Pascal,” p. 57.Google Scholar

37 14 (338); 90 (337); Pascal et le Droit, p. 34;Google Scholar 926 (582).

38 797 (301); 604 (871); Brimo, , Pascal et le Droit, pp. 128–29;Google Scholar 58 (332); “Three Discourses,” Oeuvres Completes, p. 619.Google Scholar

39 85 (878); End of 12th Provincial Letter, Oeuvres Completes, pp. 804805.Google Scholar

40 949 (930); 974 (949).

41 Brimo, , Pascal et le Droit, pp. 4344.Google Scholar

42 “Preface pour le Traite du Vide,” Oeuvres Completes, pp. 529, 530, 531ff.;Google Scholar 473 (500); 376 (484); Brimo, , Pascal et le Droit, p. 44.Google Scholar

43 Dariosecq, , “Le Pensée Politique de Pascal,” p. 58;Google Scholar 533 (331); Maritain, , Ransoming the Time;Google ScholarGoldmann, , Le Dieu Caché, p. 41.Google Scholar For a recent treatment of the relation of Christian theology to law resembling Pascal's Christocentric view, see Pannenberg, Wolfahrt, “On the Theology of Law,” in Ethics (Philadelphia, 1981), pp. 2356.Google Scholar

44 148 (428); 421 (477); 372 (483).

45 210 (451); 211 (453); Hobbes, , Leviathan, 29:210;Google Scholar Kant, Eternal Peace, cited in Strauss, Leo, Natural Right and History (Chicago, 1953), pp. 193–94;Google Scholar“Three Discourses,” Oeuvres Completes, pp. 620–21.Google Scholar

46 Baird, , Studies in Pascal's Ethics, p. 8.Google Scholar

47 51 (293); 60 (294); 421 (477).

48 Peirce, , Collected Papers, ed. Hartshorne, Chas. and Weiss, Paul, 6 vols. (Cambridge, Mass., 19311935), I:673; IV:68; V:317.Google Scholar See also DeMarco, Jos. P., “Peirce's Concept of Community,” Transactions of Charles S. Peirce Society, 7 (Winter 1971), 2436.Google Scholar

49 564 (485); 360 (482); 370 (480); 372 (483); 373 (476); 374 (475).