Question 1: Who said "Man is a reed with thoughts"? What was his original intention? "Man is a thinking reed" is a famous saying of the French thinker Pascal. He means that human life is as fragile as a reed, and anything in the universe can kill people. However, even so, human beings are still much nobler than anything in the universe, because humans have a soul that can think.
Question 2: Some people say that man is a thinking reed. What does it mean? The French thinker Pascal has a famous saying: Man is a thinking reed. What he means is that human life As fragile as a reed, anything in the universe can kill people. However, even so, humans are still much nobler than anything in the universe, because humans have a soul that can think.
Question 3 : I would like to ask: What does the sentence "Man is a thinking reed" mean? Friends who know can help explain in detail. Thank you. "Thinking Reed" comes from the collection of essays "Thoughts" published by Blaise Pascal, a seventeenth-century French scientist and thinker in 1670. He wrote in the article that people are just He is a reed, the most fragile thing in nature; but he is a thinking reed. It does not take the whole universe to take up arms to destroy him; a breath, a drop of water is enough to kill him. But even if the universe destroys him, man is still far nobler than the thing that kills him; for he knows that he is going to die, and that the universe has an advantage over him, of which the universe knows nothing. Therefore, all our dignity lies in our thoughts... Pascal was frail and sickly throughout his life. He only lived to be thirty-nine years old and never married. His book "Records of Thoughts" is regarded as one of the three classic Western prose works. "The Thinking Reed" Eco
Question 4: Who said that man is a thinking reed? Pascal
It means that man is just a reed. The most fragile thing in nature; but he is a thinking reed. It does not take the entire universe to take up arms to destroy it; a breath or a drop of water is enough to kill him. But even if the universe destroys him, man is still far nobler than the thing that kills him; for he knows that he is going to die, and that the universe has an advantage over him, of which the universe knows nothing.
All human dignity lies in thought