1st Edition

Volition, Rhetoric, and Emotion in the Work of Pascal

By Thomas Parker Copyright 2008
    242 Pages
    by Routledge

    242 Pages
    by Routledge

    This study identifies and analyzes a compelling theory and practice of persuasion that integrates the complexity of human desire. It demonstrates how the philosophical component in Pascal's description of the will makes a seamless integration into a vehicle of persuasion and poetics, providing a privileged viewpoint for understanding the author's complete works, arguing that the notion of will is of fundamental importance in Pascal's anthropology as well as in his rhetoric. This avenue of interpretation is both fruitful and difficult, because the word "volonte" means very different things in Pascal and in modern French. Beginning by contextualizing the notion of 'volonte' and explaining its expanded use in the seventeenth-century lexicon, the author then endeavors to show that Pascal borrows an essentially Augustinian paradigm of desire to create a depiction of the will divided against itself, surreptitiously yearning for what its bearer does not want.

    Preface

    Acknowledgments

    Introduction

    Part One: Freedom and the Anatomy of the Will

    Chapter One: The Will’s Expanded Lexicon and its Seventeenth-Century Context

    Chapter Two: Early Modern Free Will

    Part Two: The Will and Knowledge

    Chapter Three: The Interior Regard of the Will

    Chapter Four: The Will’s Effect on Knowledge

    Chapter Five: The Rhetoric of Uncertainty

    Part Three: Will, Wisdom, and Eloquence

    Chapter Six: Nonrepresentational Truth, Wisdom and Justice

    Conclusion

    Notes

    Bibliography

    Index

    Biography

    Parker, Thomas