ABSTRACT

The concept of ‘world visions’, first elaborated in the early work of Georg Lukàcs, is used here as a tool whereby the similarities between Pascal’s Pensées and Kant’s critical philosophy are contrasted with the rationalism of Descartes and the empiricism of Hume. For Lucien Goldmann, a leading exponent of the most fruitful method of applying Marxist ideas to literary and philosophical problems, the ‘tragic vision’ marked an important phase in the development of European thought from rationalism and empiricism to the dialectical philosophy of Hegel, Marx and Lukàcs. The book is not a collection of isolated essays on Kant, Pascal, Racine, the status of the legal nobility in seventeenth-century France and the exact nature of the religious movement known as Jansenism, but an attempt to formulate, by an examination of these different topics, a general approach to the problems of philosophy, of literary criticism, and of the relationship between thought and action in human society.

part |2 pages

PART ONE: THE TRAGIC VISION

chapter I|19 pages

The Whole and the Parts

chapter II|18 pages

The Tragic Vision: God

chapter III|22 pages

The Tragic Vision: the World

chapter IV|25 pages

The Tragic Vision: Man

part |2 pages

PART TWO: THE SOCIAL AND INTELLECTUAL BASIS OF THE TRAGIC VISION IN SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY FRANCE

chapter V|14 pages

World Visions and Social Classes

chapter VI|39 pages

Jansenism and the noblesse de robe

chapter VII|23 pages

Jansenism and the Tragic Vision

part |2 pages

PART THREE: PASCAL

chapter VIII|25 pages

The Man. The Meaning of His Life

chapter IX|11 pages

Paradox and Fragment

chapter X|17 pages

Man and the Human Condition

chapter XI|15 pages

Living Beings and Space

chapter XII|25 pages

Epistemology

chapter XIII|12 pages

Ethics and Aesthetics

chapter XIV|11 pages

Social Life: Justice, Power and Wealth

chapter XV|20 pages

The Wager

chapter XVI|8 pages

The Christian Religion

part |2 pages

PART FOUR: RACINE

chapter XVII|86 pages

Tragic Vision in Racine's Theatre