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The problem with Pascal’s wager

Graham Tomlin focuses on the Catholic philosopher’s search for intellectual certainty, but the cosmic gamble’s serious flaws don’t get the attention they deserve

17 May 2025

9:00 AM

17 May 2025

9:00 AM

Blaise Pascal: The Man Who Made the Modern World Graham Tomlin

Hodder, pp.448, 25

Blaise Pascal resists definition. During a short life (he died in 1662, aged 39) he invented the calculator, laid the foundations for probability theory and created the first public transport system. He was also an austere Catholic, whose call for a return to strict Augustinian doctrines put him outside the religious mainstream.

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