Blaise Pascal: The Child Prodigy Torn Between Mathematical Genius and Religious Terror

Blaise Pascal built a working mechanical calculator at nineteen, laid the foundations of probability theory, and made fundamental contributions to physics and geometry. Then, at thirty-one, he had a mystical experience so overwhelming that he sewed a written account of it into his coat and wore it against his skin for the rest of his life. He abandoned mathematics for theology and spent his final years writing the Pensees — fragments of a defense of Christianity left unfinished by his death at thirty-nine.

This episode traces Pascal from his prodigy childhood through the calculating machine, the probability correspondence with Fermat, the “Night of Fire” conversion, and the theological fragments that became one of the most influential works in Christian apologetics.

  • Pascal’s childhood as a mathematical prodigy and the calculator he built as a teenager
  • The probability theory correspondence with Fermat and Pascal’s wager on the existence of God
  • The “Night of Fire” — the mystical experience that turned a mathematician into a theologian
  • The Pensees — the unfinished defense of faith that became a masterpiece of French literature

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