The Pensées are the unfinished notes Blaise Pascal left toward a defence of the Christian faith. Published after his death in 1662, these fragments range from icy mathematical clarity to anguished spiritual searching. Pascal diagnoses human “misery and greatness,” the restlessness of distraction, and the limits of reason, in sentences of startling psychological depth.
Here too is the celebrated “Wager,” Pascal’s argument that, faced with uncertainty about God, the prudent gambler bets on belief. More than apologetics, the book is a profound meditation on what it is to be a thinking creature suspended between infinities. Aphoristic, paradoxical, and unforgettable, the Pensées remain among the most quoted works of French thought and a landmark in the literature of doubt and faith.