Les Provinciales
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Assorted References
- major reference
- In Blaise Pascal: Les Provinciales of Blaise Pascal
Written in defense of Antoine Arnauld, an opponent of the Jesuits and a defender of Jansenism who was on trial before the faculty of theology in Paris for his controversial religious works, Pascal’s 18 Lettres écrites par Louis de Montalte à…
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- In Blaise Pascal: Les Provinciales of Blaise Pascal
- association with Arnauld family
- In Arnauld Family
…in the composition of Pascal’s Les Provinciales (1656–57), a series of letters written in defense of Arnauld, who was, at the time, on trial before the faculty of theology in Paris because of his Jansenist views.
Read More - In Antoine Arnauld
…series of letters known as Les Provinciales (1656–57). During the period of the great persecution of the Jansenists (1661–69), Arnauld emerged as a leader of the resistance.
Read More - In Cornelius Otto Jansen: Condemnation of Jansen’s teachings
Blaise Pascal wrote Les Provinciales (“Provincial Letters”) in 1656 and 1657 to defend Antoine Arnauld. The latter was condemned by the Faculty of Theology at the Sorbonne.
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- In Arnauld Family
- casuistry
- In casuistry: History
” Les Provinciales (1657; The Provincial Letters), by the 17th-century French philosopher and mathematician Blaise Pascal, criticized the misuse of casuistry as sophisticated excuse making. Following Pascal’s critique, casuistry fell into disrepute.
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- In casuistry: History
place in
- French literature
- In French literature: The Classical manner
…and comic force of the Provinciales (1656–57; The Provincial Letters), his masterly satire of Jesuit casuistry.
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- In French literature: The Classical manner
- nonfictional prose
- In nonfictional prose: Dialogues
…in the dialogues of Pascal’s Provinciales (1656–57; “Provincial Letters”), the protagonist plays with the naiveté of his opponents, who always end by surrendering. The writer of a dialogue cannot affect the same casual and self-indulgent attitude as the author of a personal essay since the characters and their statements must…
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- In nonfictional prose: Dialogues
- Roman Catholic history
- In Roman Catholicism: Jansenism
philosopher Blaise Pascal in his Lettres provinciales (“Provincial Letters”), the campaign against Jesuit theology became a cause célèbre. The papacy struck out against Jansenism in 1653, when Innocent X (reigned 1644–55) issued his bull Cum occasione (“With Occasion”), and again in 1713, when Clement XI (reigned 1700–21) promulgated his constitution…
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- In Roman Catholicism: Jansenism