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Blaise Pascal Quotes
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It is your own assent to yourself, and the constant voice of your own reason, and not of others, that should make you believe (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
If a soldier or labourer complain of the hardship of his lot, set him to do nothing (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
How shall one who is so weak in his childhood become really strong when he grows older? We only change our fancies (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
We see neither justice nor injustice which does not change its nature with change in climate. Three degrees of latitude reverse all jurisprudence; a meridian decides the truth (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
Must we kill to prevent there being any wicked? This is to make both parties wicked instead of one (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
It is right that what is just should be obeyed. It is necessary that what is strongest should be obeyed (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
Too much pleasure disagrees with us. Too many concords are annoying in music; too many benefits irritate us; we wish to have the wherewithal to overpay our debts (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
Religion is so great a thing that it is right that those who will not take the trouble to seek it if it be obscure, should be deprived of it (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
Plurality which is not reduced to unity is confusion; unity which does not depend on plurality is tyranny (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
It is not only old and early impressions that deceive us; the charms of novelty have the same power (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
Most of the evils of life arise from man’s being unable to sit still in a room (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
What a strange vanity painting is; it attracts admiration by resembling the original, we do not admire (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
Beauty is a harmonious relation between something in our nature and the quality of the object which delights us (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
We never live, but we hope to live; and as we are always arranging to be happy, it must be that we never are so (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
However vast a man’s spiritual resources, he is capable of but one great passion (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
The origins of disputes between philosophers is, that one class of them have undertaken to raise man by displaying his greatness, and the other to debase him by showing his miseries (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
It is superstitious to put one’s hopes in formalities, but arrogant to refuse to submit to them (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
He who does not know his way to the sea should take a river for his guide (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
Man is obviously made for thinking. Therein lies all his dignity and his merit; and his whole duty is to think as he ought (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
Those are weaklings who know the truth and uphold it as long as it suits their purpose, and then abandon it (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
The multitude which is not brought to act as a unity, is confusion. That unity which has not its origin in the multitude is tyranny (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
Those whom we call ancient were really new in all things, and properly constituted the infancy of mankind (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
We never do evil so effectually as when we are led to do it by a false principle of conscience (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
Death is easier to bear without thinking of it, than the thought of death without peril (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
All the good maxims which are in the world fail when applied to one’s self (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
If man should commence by studying himself, he would see how impossible it is to go further (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
The sweetness of glory is so great that, join it to what we will, even to death, we love it (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
The sole cause of man’s unhappiness is that he does not know how to stay quietly in his room (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
There is no arena in which vanity displays itself under such a variety of forms as in conversation (Blaise Pascal Quotes)
We sometimes learn more from the sight of evil than from an example of good; and it is well to accustom ourselves to profit by the evil which is so common, while that which is good is so rare (Blaise Pascal Quotes)