Blaise Pascal Quotes
Blaise Pascal Quotes. Below is a collection of famous Blaise Pascal quotes. Here you can find the most popular and greatest quotes by Blaise Pascal. Share these quotations with your friends and family.
We are generally the better persuaded by the reasons we discover ourselves than by those given to us by others.
By Blaise Pascal
Truth is so obscure in these times and falsehood so established that unless one loves the truth, he cannot know it.
By Blaise Pascal
Truth is so obscure in these times, and falsehood so established, that, unless we love the truth, we cannot know it.
By Blaise Pascal
Truly it is an evil to be full of faults; but it is a still greater evil to be full of them and to be unwilling to recognize them, since that is to add the further fault of a voluntary illusion.
By Blaise Pascal
Too much and too little wine. Give him none, he cannot find truth; give him too much, the same.
By Blaise Pascal
Time heals griefs and quarrels, for we change and are no longer the same persons. Neither the offender nor the offended are any more themselves.
By Blaise Pascal
Through space the universe encompasses and swallows me up like an atom; through thought I comprehend the world.
By Blaise Pascal
There is a God shaped vacuum in the heart of every man which cannot be filled by any created thing, but only by God, the Creator, made known through Jesus.
By Blaise Pascal
There are two kinds of people one can call reasonable: those who serve God with all their heart because they know him, and those who seek him with all their heart because they do not know him.
By Blaise Pascal
There are some who speak well and write badly. For the place and the audience warm them, and draw from their minds more than they think of without that warmth.
By Blaise Pascal
The weather and my mood have little connection. I have my foggy and my fine days within me; my prosperity or misfortune has little to do with the matter.
By Blaise Pascal
The strength of a man's virtue should not be measured by his special exertions, but by his habitual acts.
By Blaise Pascal
The sensibility of man to trifles, and his insensibility to great things, indicates a strange inversion.
By Blaise Pascal
The sensitivity of men to small matters, and their indifference to great ones, indicates a strange inversion.
By Blaise Pascal
The present letter is a very long one, simply because I had no leisure to make it shorter.
By Blaise Pascal
The last act is bloody, however pleasant all the rest of the play is: a little earth is thrown at last upon our head, and that is the end forever.
By Blaise Pascal
The last proceeding of reason is to recognize that there is an infinity of things which are beyond it. There is nothing so conformable to reason as this disavowal of reason.
By Blaise Pascal
The immortality of the soul is a matter which is of so great consequence to us and which touches us so profoundly that we must have lost all feeling to be indifferent about it.
By Blaise Pascal