Title: Blaise Pascal
1Blaise Pascal
2The Beginning
- Born in Clermont-Ferrand, France, June 19, 1623
- His father, Etienne, was a royal tax officer
- Probably grew up in wealthy circumstances
- He was taught by his father with an unorthodox
approach - First learned methods of reason and judgment -
discovering the why behind facts. - At age 12, Pascal was allowed to learn Latin, but
not mathematics.
3Pascals greatest achievements
- By age 12, he proved Euclids theorems (The
Elements) on his own! - By 16, Had published a book on conic sections
- Invented projective geometry
- Proved that vacuums could be created
- Invented the syringe and hydraulic lift
- Unified and proved much in fluid mechanics
- Came up with the basis for much of modern
insurance and probability work, together with
Pierre de Fermat - Cleared up many question concerning cycloids
41642- Pascals Adding Machine
- Many prototypes were constructed
- Never had a large market, probably because of
price
5The faith of the man
- Christ was the center of his theology
- In Jesus is all our virtue and all our
happiness. Apart from Him there is only vice,
misery, error, darkness, death, despair. - He converted to Jansenism, a branch of
Catholicism, in 1646 - They rediscovered Augustine and opposed
semi-Pelagianism - Major beliefs sound quite similar to Reformers
- Stressed moral purity
6The faith of the man
General distinguishing belief Man cannot do any
act truly pleasing to God without the grace of
God. (regeneration) Gods grace effectively
accomplishes His will.
Writings...
Provincial Letters -These were Jansenist letters
that were written in opposition to the Jesuits
- Pensées (Thoughts) - chapters include
discussion on - mathematics reason
- fundamentals of Christianity
- proofs for Jesus Christ
7His mathematics applied to faith
- His work with probability produced what has
become known as Pascals wager - It demonstrates a method of coming to a
reasonable decision. - Either God is or God is not. One has no choice
but to wager on which of these statements is
true, where the wager is in terms of ones
actions. - Which way should one act?
- In complete indifference to God or
- In a way compatible with the (Christian) notion
of God.
8His mathematics applied to faith (cont.)
- Which way should one act?
- If God is not, it does not matter much.
- If God is,
- wagering that there is no God will bring
damnation while - wagering that God exists will bring salvation.
- Because the outcome of the latter is infinitely
more desirable than the former, the outcome of
this decision-problem is clear, even if one
believes that the probability of Gods existence
is small - The reasonable person will act as if God exists.
"If God does not exist, one will lose nothing by
believing in Him, while if He does exist, one
will lose everything by not believing."
-Pascal
9Development of Calculus
- From 1653-1654 he wrote
- Traité du triangle arithnétique
- Traité des ordres numériques (published in 1665)
- Traité de la sommation des puissances numériques
- Here Pascal laid down the principles of
differential and integral calculus
10Pascal, a man who lived and worked in light of
the existence of a Sovereign, Personal God who
revealed Himself in the person of the Lord Jesus
Christ, grew gravely ill in 1659 and died in
August 1962
11Pascal Beyond
- Unlike the Protestant Reformers, Pascals
religious order saw an unscriptural dichotomy
between secular and ecclesiastical activities.
Instead of doing all to the glory of God, Pascal
felt an unnecessary tension between his
mathematical studies and his faith. - Pascals independent discovery of Geometrys
postulates testifies that mathematics is a
discovery of the works of God and not merely an
invention of man. - One could believe that calculus was a work of
art produced by the free will of man if one could
believe the possibility of a symphony arising
from the scores of a number of composers who
supposed they were writing only tone poems for
solos or chamber groups. This symphony comes
together without changing even the key, though
the artists wrote during hundreds of years in
different corners of the globe without the
knowledge of each others work. - Zimmerman
Truth and the Transcendent
12Pascal Beyond
- Many discoveries even occurred simultaneously in
the history of mathematics despite great
distances and slow communication - Law of Inverse Squares by Newton and Halley
- Logarithms by Burgi and Napier/Briggs
- Calculus by Newton on the island and Leibniz on
the continent - Two geometries of Russian Lobachevski and
Hungarian Bolyai - Modern vector calculus by both Hamilton and
Grassman - Contradiction Hypothesis by H.A. Lorentz and
Fitzgerald - The double Theta functions by Gopel and Rosehain
- The rectification of the semi-cubal parabola by
Van Heauraet, Neil, and Fermat - Geometric law of duality by Oncelet and Gergone
- Principle of Least Squares by Gauss and Legendre
- It seems to be my fate to concur in nearly all
my theoretical works with Legendre - - Gauss quoted in Bells Men of Mathematics
- These truths conspire together to point to the
Divine Creator and Sustainer.