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David Hume

David Hume (/hjuːm/; born David Home; 7 May NS [26 April OS] 1711 – 25 August 1776)[7] was a Scottish Enlightenment philosopher, historian, economist, librarian,[8] and essayist, who is best known today for his highly influential system of philosophical empiricism, skepticism, and naturalism.[1] Beginning with A Treatise of Human Nature (1739–40), Hume strove to create a naturalistic science of man that examined the psychological basis of human nature. Hume followed John Locke in rejecting the existence of innate ideas, concluding that all human knowledge derives solely from experience. This places him with Francis Bacon, Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, and George Berkeley as an empiricist.[9]

David Hume
David Hume by Allan Ramsay, 1754
Born
David Home

7 May NS [26 April OS] 1711
Lawnmarket, Edinburgh, Scotland
Died25 August 1776(1776-08-25) (aged 65)
EducationUniversity of Edinburgh
Era18th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
School
Main interests
Notable ideas

Hume argued that inductive reasoning and belief in causality cannot be justified rationally; instead, they result from custom and mental habit. We never actually perceive that one event causes another but only experience the "constant conjunction" of events. This problem of induction means that to draw any causal inferences from past experience, it is necessary to presuppose that the future will resemble the past, a metaphysical presupposition which cannot itself be grounded in prior experience.[10]

An opponent of philosophical rationalists, Hume held that passions rather than reason govern human behaviour, famously proclaiming that "Reason is, and ought only to be the slave of the passions."[9][11] Hume was also a sentimentalist who held that ethics are based on emotion or sentiment rather than abstract moral principle. He maintained an early commitment to naturalistic explanations of moral phenomena and is usually accepted by historians of European philosophy to have first clearly expounded the is–ought problem, or the idea that a statement of fact alone can never give rise to a normative conclusion of what ought to be done.[12]

Hume denied that humans have an actual conception of the self, positing that we experience only a bundle of sensations, and that the self is nothing more than this bundle of perceptions connected by an association of ideas. Hume's compatibilist theory of free will takes causal determinism as fully compatible with human freedom.[13] His philosophy of religion, including his rejection of miracles, and of the argument from design for God's existence, were especially controversial for their time.

Hume left a legacy that affected utilitarianism, logical positivism, the philosophy of science, early analytic philosophy, cognitive science, theology, and many other fields and thinkers. Immanuel Kant credited Hume as the inspiration that had awakened him from his "dogmatic slumbers."

Early life edit

Hume was born on 26 April 1711 (Old Style), as David Home, in a tenement on the north side of Edinburgh's Lawnmarket. He was the second of two sons born to Catherine Home (née Falconer), daughter of Sir David Falconer of Newton, Midlothian and his wife Mary Falconer (née Norvell),[14] and Joseph Home of Chirnside in the County of Berwick, an advocate of Ninewells. Joseph died just after David's second birthday. Catherine, who never remarried, raised the two brothers and their sister on her own.[15]

Hume changed his family name's spelling in 1734, as the surname 'Home' (pronounced as 'Hume') was not well-known in England. Hume never married and lived partly at his Chirnside family home in Berwickshire, which had belonged to the family since the 16th century. His finances as a young man were very "slender", as his family was not rich; as a younger son he had little patrimony to live on.[16]

Hume attended the University of Edinburgh at an unusually early age—either 12 or possibly as young as 10—at a time when 14 was the typical age. Initially, Hume considered a career in law, because of his family. However, in his words, he came to have:[16]

…an insurmountable aversion to everything but the pursuits of Philosophy and general Learning; and while [my family] fanceyed I was poring over Voet and Vinnius, Cicero and Virgil were the Authors which I was secretly devouring.

He had little respect for the professors of his time, telling a friend in 1735 that "there is nothing to be learnt from a Professor, which is not to be met with in Books".[17] He did not graduate.[18]

"Disease of the learned" edit

At age 18 or so, Hume made a philosophical discovery that opened up to him "a new Scene of Thought", inspiring him "to throw up every other Pleasure or Business to apply entirely to it".[19] As he did not recount what this scene exactly was, commentators have offered a variety of speculations.[20] One prominent interpretation among contemporary Humean scholarship is that this new "scene of thought" was Hume's realisation that Francis Hutcheson's theory of moral sense could be applied to the understanding of morality as well.

From this inspiration, Hume set out to spend a minimum of 10 years reading and writing. He soon came to the verge of a mental breakdown, first starting with a coldness—which he attributed to a "Laziness of Temper"—that lasted about nine months. Later, some scurvy spots broke out on his fingers, persuading Hume's physician to diagnose Hume as suffering from the "Disease of the Learned".

Hume wrote that he "went under a Course of Bitters and Anti-Hysteric Pills", taken along with a pint of claret every day. He also decided to have a more active life to better continue his learning.[21] His health improved somewhat, but in 1731 he was afflicted with a ravenous appetite and palpitations. After eating well for a time, he went from being "tall, lean and raw-bon'd" to being "sturdy, robust [and] healthful-like."[22][23][24] Indeed, Hume would become well known for being obese and having a fondness for good port and cheese, often using them as philosophical metaphors for his conjectures.[25]

Career edit

Although having noble ancestry, at age 25, Hume had no source of income and no learned profession. As was common at his time, he became a merchant's assistant, despite having to leave his native Scotland. He travelled via Bristol to La Flèche in Anjou, France. There he had frequent discourse with the Jesuits of the College of La Flèche.[26]

Hume was derailed in his attempts to start a university career by protests over his alleged "atheism",[27][28] also lamenting that his literary debut, A Treatise of Human Nature, "fell dead-born from the press."[14] However, he found literary success in his lifetime as an essayist, and a career as a librarian at the University of Edinburgh. These successes provided him much needed income at the time. His tenure there, and the access to research materials it provided, resulted in Hume's writing the massive six-volume The History of England, which became a bestseller and the standard history of England in its day. For over 60 years, Hume was the dominant interpreter of English history.[29]: 120  He described his "love for literary fame" as his "ruling passion"[14] and judged his two late works, the so-called "first" and "second" enquiries, An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding and An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals, as his greatest literary and philosophical achievements.[14] He would ask of his contemporaries to judge him on the merits of the later texts alone, rather than on the more radical formulations of his early, youthful work, dismissing his philosophical debut as juvenilia: "A work which the Author had projected before he left College."[30] Despite Hume's protestations, a consensus exists today that his most important arguments and philosophically distinctive doctrines are found in the original form they take in the Treatise. Though he was only 23 years old when starting this work, it is now regarded as one of the most important in the history of Western philosophy.[12]

1730s edit

Hume worked for four years on his first major work, A Treatise of Human Nature, subtitled "Being an Attempt to Introduce the Experimental Method of Reasoning into Moral Subjects", completing it in 1738 at age 28. Although many scholars today consider the Treatise to be Hume's most important work and one of the most important books in Western philosophy, critics in Great Britain at the time described it as "abstract and unintelligible".[31] As Hume had spent most of his savings during those four years,[21] he resolved "to make a very rigid frugality supply [his] deficiency of fortune, to maintain unimpaired [his] independency, and to regard every object as contemptible except the improvements of [his] talents in literature".[32]: 352 

Despite the disappointment, Hume later wrote: "Being naturally of a cheerful and sanguine temper, I soon recovered from the blow and prosecuted with great ardour my studies in the country."[32]: 352  There, in an attempt to make his larger work better known and more intelligible, he published the An Abstract of a Book lately Published as a summary of the main doctrines of the Treatise, without revealing its authorship.[33] This work contained the same ideas, but with a shorter and clearer explanation. Although there has been some academic speculation as to who actually wrote this pamphlet,[34] it is generally regarded as Hume's creation.[35]

1740s edit

After the publication of Essays Moral and Political in 1741—included in the later edition as Essays, Moral, Political, and Literary—Hume applied for the Chair of Pneumatics and Moral Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh. However, the position was given to William Cleghorn[36] after Edinburgh ministers petitioned the town council not to appoint Hume because he was seen as an atheist.[37]

 
An engraving of Hume from the first volume of his The History of England, 1754

In 1745, during the Jacobite risings, Hume tutored the Marquess of Annandale, an engagement that ended in disarray after about a year. The Marquess could not follow with Hume's lectures, his father saw little need for philosophy, and on a personal level, the Marquess found Hume's dietary tendencies to be bizarre.[38] Hume then started his great historical work, The History of England, which took fifteen years and ran to over a million words. During this time, he was also involved with the Canongate Theatre through his friend John Home, a preacher.[39]

In this context, he associated with Lord Monboddo and other thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment in Edinburgh. From 1746, Hume served for three years as secretary to General James St Clair, who was envoy to the courts of Turin and Vienna. At that time Hume wrote Philosophical Essays Concerning Human Understanding, later published as An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding. Often called the First Enquiry, it proved little more successful than the Treatise, perhaps because of the publication of his short autobiography My Own Life, which "made friends difficult for the first Enquiry".[40] By the end of this period Hume had attained his well-known corpulent stature; "the good table of the General and the prolonged inactive life had done their work", leaving him "a man of tremendous bulk".[25]

In 1749 he went to live with his brother in the countryside, although he continued to associate with the aforementioned Scottish Enlightenment figures.

1750s–1760s edit

Hume's religious views were often suspect and, in the 1750s, it was necessary for his friends to avert a trial against him on the charge of heresy, specifically in an ecclesiastical court. However, he "would not have come and could not be forced to attend if he said he was not a member of the Established Church".[41] Hume failed to gain the chair of philosophy at the University of Glasgow due to his religious views. By this time, he had published the Philosophical Essays, which were decidedly anti-religious. This represented a turning point in his career and the various opportunities made available to him. Even Adam Smith, his personal friend who had vacated the Glasgow philosophy chair, was against his appointment out of concern that public opinion would be against it.[42] In 1761 all his works were banned on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum.[43]

Hume returned to Edinburgh in 1751. In the following year, the Faculty of Advocates hired him to be their Librarian, a job in which he would receive little to no pay, but which nonetheless gave him "the command of a large library".[i][14]: 11  This resource enabled him to continue historical research for The History of England. Hume's volume of Political Discourses, written in 1749 and published by Kincaid & Donaldson in 1752,[44] was the only work he considered successful on first publication.[14]: 10 

In 1753 Hume moved from his house on Riddles Court on the Lawnmarket to a house on the Canongate at the other end of the Royal Mile. Here he lived in a tenement known as Jack's Land, immediately west of the still surviving Shoemakers Land.[45]

Eventually, with the publication of his six-volume The History of England between 1754 and 1762, Hume achieved the fame that he coveted.[46] The volumes traced events from the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution of 1688 and was a bestseller in its day. Hume was also a longtime friend of bookseller Andrew Millar, who sold Hume's History (after acquiring the rights from Scottish bookseller Gavin Hamilton[47]), although the relationship was sometimes complicated. Letters between them illuminate both men's interest in the success of the History. In 1762 Hume moved from Jack's Land on the Canongate to James Court on the Lawnmarket. He sold the house to James Boswell in 1766.[48]

Later life edit

From 1763 to 1765, Hume was invited to attend Lord Hertford in Paris, where he became secretary to the British embassy.[49] Hume was well received in Paris, and while there he met with Isaac de Pinto.[50]

In 1765, Hume served as British Chargé d'affaires, writing "despatches to the British Secretary of State".[51] He wrote of his Paris life, "I really wish often for the plain roughness of The Poker Club of Edinburgh…to correct and qualify so much lusciousness."[52] In 1766, upon returning to Britain, Hume encouraged his patron Lord Hertford to invest in a number of slave plantations, acquired by George Colebrooke and others in the Windward Islands.[53] In June 1766 Hume facilitated the purchase of the slave plantation by writing to Victor-Thérèse Charpentier, marquis d'Ennery, the French governor of Martinique, on behalf of his friend, John Stewart, a wine merchant whom he had lent £400 earlier in the same year.

According to Dr. Felix Waldmann, a former Hume Fellow at the University of Edinburgh, Hume's "puckish scepticism about the existence of religious miracles played a significant part in defining the critical outlook which underpins the practice of modern science." Waldmann has also made the disputed claim that Hume's views "served to reinforce the institution of racialised slavery in the later 18th century."[54] [55] [56]

In 1766, Hume left Paris to accompany Jean-Jacques Rousseau to England. Once there, he and Rousseau fell out,[57] leaving Hume sufficiently worried about the damage to his reputation from the quarrel with Rousseau. So much so, that Hume would author an account of the dispute, titling it "A concise and genuine account of the dispute between Mr. Hume and Mr. Rousseau".[58]

In 1767, Hume was appointed Under Secretary of State for the Northern Department. Here, he wrote that he was given "all the secrets of the Kingdom". In 1769 he returned to James' Court in Edinburgh, where he would live from 1771 until his death in 1776.

Hume's nephew and namesake, David Hume of Ninewells (1757–1838), was a co-founder of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1783. He was a Professor of Scots Law at Edinburgh University and rose to be Principal Clerk of Session in the Scottish High Court and Baron of the Exchequer. He is buried with his uncle in Old Calton Cemetery.[59]

Autobiography edit

In the last year of his life, Hume wrote an extremely brief autobiographical essay titled "My Own Life",[14] summing up his entire life in "fewer than 5 pages";[60] it contains many interesting judgments that have been of enduring interest to subsequent readers of Hume.[61][62] Donald Seibert (1984), a scholar of 18th-century literature, judged it a "remarkable autobiography, even though it may lack the usual attractions of that genre. Anyone hankering for startling revelations or amusing anecdotes had better look elsewhere."[61]

Despite condemning vanity as a dangerous passion,[63] in his autobiography Hume confesses his belief that the "love of literary fame" had served as his "ruling passion" in life, and claims that this desire "never soured my temper, notwithstanding my frequent disappointments". One such disappointment Hume discusses in this account is in the initial literary reception of the Treatise, which he claims to have overcome by means of the success of the Essays: "the work was favourably received, and soon made me entirely forget my former disappointment". Hume, in his own retrospective judgment, argues that his philosophical debut's apparent failure "had proceeded more from the manner than the matter". He thus suggests that "I had been guilty of a very usual indiscretion, in going to the press too early."

Hume also provides an unambiguous self-assessment of the relative value of his works: that "my Enquiry concerning the Principles of Morals; which, in my own opinion (who ought not to judge on that subject) is of all my writings, historical, philosophical, or literary, incomparably the best." He also wrote of his social relations: "My company was not unacceptable to the young and careless, as well as to the studious and literary", noting of his complex relation to religion, as well as to the state, that "though I wantonly exposed myself to the rage of both civil and religious factions, they seemed to be disarmed in my behalf of their wonted fury". He goes on to profess of his character: "My friends never had occasion to vindicate any one circumstance of my character and conduct." Hume concludes the essay with a frank admission:[14]

I cannot say there is no vanity in making this funeral oration of myself, but I hope it is not a misplaced one; and this is a matter of fact which is easily cleared and ascertained.

Death edit

 
David Hume's mausoleum by Robert Adam in the Old Calton Burial Ground, Edinburgh

Diarist and biographer James Boswell saw Hume a few weeks before his death from a form of abdominal cancer. Hume told him that he sincerely believed it a "most unreasonable fancy" that there might be life after death.[64][65] Hume asked that his body be interred in a "simple Roman tomb", requesting in his will that it be inscribed only with his name and the year of his birth and death, "leaving it to Posterity to add the Rest".[66]

David Hume died at the southwest corner of St. Andrew's Square in Edinburgh's New Town, at what is now 21 Saint David Street.[67] A popular story, consistent with some historical evidence and with the help of coincidence, suggests that the street was named after Hume.[68]

His tomb stands, as he wished it, on the southwestern slope of Calton Hill, in the Old Calton Cemetery. Adam Smith later recounted Hume's amusing speculation that he might ask Charon, Hades' ferryman, to allow him a few more years of life in order to see "the downfall of some of the prevailing systems of superstition". The ferryman replied, "You loitering rogue, that will not happen these many hundred years.… Get into the boat this instant."[69]

Writings edit

A Treatise of Human Nature begins with the introduction: "'Tis evident, that all the sciences have a relation, more or less, to human nature.… Even Mathematics, Natural Philosophy, and Natural Religion, are in some measure dependent on the science of Man."[70] The science of man, as Hume explains, is the "only solid foundation for the other sciences" and that the method for this science requires both experience and observation as the foundations of a logical argument.[70]: 7  In regards to this, philosophical historian Frederick Copleston (1999) suggests that it was Hume's aim to apply to the science of man the method of experimental philosophy (the term that was current at the time to imply natural philosophy), and that "Hume's plan is to extend to philosophy in general the methodological limitations of Newtonian physics."[71]

Until recently, Hume was seen as a forerunner of logical positivism, a form of anti-metaphysical empiricism. According to the logical positivists (in summary of their verification principle), unless a statement could be verified by experience, or else was true or false by definition (i.e., either tautological or contradictory), then it was meaningless. Hume, on this view, was a protopositivist, who, in his philosophical writings, attempted to demonstrate the ways in which ordinary propositions about objects, causal relations, the self, and so on, are semantically equivalent to propositions about one's experiences.[72]

Many commentators have since rejected this understanding of Humean empiricism, stressing an epistemological (rather than a semantic) reading of his project.[ii] According to this opposing view, Hume's empiricism consisted in the idea that it is our knowledge, and not our ability to conceive, that is restricted to what can be experienced. Hume thought that we can form beliefs about that which extends beyond any possible experience, through the operation of faculties such as custom and the imagination, but he was sceptical about claims to knowledge on this basis.

Impressions and ideas edit

A central doctrine of Hume's philosophy, stated in the very first lines of the Treatise of Human Nature, is that the mind consists of perceptions, or the mental objects which are present to it, and which divide into two categories: "All the perceptions of the human mind resolve themselves into two distinct kinds, which I shall call impressions and ideas." Hume believed that it would "not be very necessary to employ many words in explaining this distinction", which commentators have generally taken to mean the distinction between feeling and thinking.[73] Controversially, Hume, in some sense, may regard the distinction as a matter of degree, as he takes impressions to be distinguished from ideas on the basis of their force, liveliness, and vivacity—what Henry E. Allison (2008) calls the "FLV criterion."[74] Ideas are therefore "faint" impressions. For example, experiencing the painful sensation of touching a hot pan's handle is more forceful than simply thinking about touching a hot pan. According to Hume, impressions are meant to be the original form of all our ideas. From this, Don Garrett (2002) has coined the term copy principle,[73] referring to Hume's doctrine that all ideas are ultimately copied from some original impression, whether it be a passion or sensation, from which they derive.[74]

Simple and complex edit

After establishing the forcefulness of impressions and ideas, these two categories are further broken down into simple and complex: "simple perceptions or impressions and ideas are such as admit of no distinction nor separation", whereas "the complex are the contrary to these, and may be distinguished into parts".[70] When looking at an apple, a person experiences a variety of colour-sensations—what Hume notes as a complex impression. Similarly, a person experiences a variety of taste-sensations, tactile-sensations, and smell-sensations when biting into an apple, with the overall sensation—again, a complex impression. Thinking about an apple allows a person to form complex ideas, which are made of similar parts as the complex impressions they were developed from, but which are also less forceful. Hume believes that complex perceptions can be broken down into smaller and smaller parts until perceptions are reached that have no parts of their own, and these perceptions are thus referred to as simple.

Principles of association edit

Regardless of how boundless it may seem; a person's imagination is confined to the mind's ability to recombine the information it has already acquired from the body's sensory experience (the ideas that have been derived from impressions). In addition, "as our imagination takes our most basic ideas and leads us to form new ones, it is directed by three principles of association, namely, resemblance, contiguity, and cause and effect":[75]

  • The principle of resemblance refers to the tendency of ideas to become associated if the objects they represent resemble one another. For example, someone looking at an illustration of a flower can conceive an idea of the physical flower because the idea of the illustrated object is associated with the physical object's idea.
  • The principle of contiguity describes the tendency of ideas to become associated if the objects they represent are near to each other in time or space, such as when the thought of a crayon in a box leads one to think of the crayon contiguous to it.
  • The principle of cause and effect refers to the tendency of ideas to become associated if the objects they represent are causally related, which explains how remembering a broken window can make someone think of a ball that had caused the window to shatter.

Hume elaborates more on the last principle, explaining that, when somebody observes that one object or event consistently produces the same object or event, that results in "an expectation that a particular event (a 'cause') will be followed by another event (an 'effect') previously and constantly associated with it".[76] Hume calls this principle custom, or habit, saying that "custom...renders our experience useful to us, and makes us expect, for the future, a similar train of events with those which have appeared in the past".[28] However, even though custom can serve as a guide in life, it still only represents an expectation. In other words:[77]

Experience cannot establish a necessary connection between cause and effect, because we can imagine without contradiction a case where the cause does not produce its usual effect…the reason why we mistakenly infer that there is something in the cause that necessarily produces its effect is because our past experiences have habituated us to think in this way.

Continuing this idea, Hume argues that "only in the pure realm of ideas, logic, and mathematics, not contingent on the direct sense awareness of reality, [can] causation safely…be applied—all other sciences are reduced to probability".[78][28] He uses this scepticism to reject metaphysics and many theological views on the basis that they are not grounded in fact and observations, and are therefore beyond the reach of human understanding.

Induction and causation edit

The cornerstone of Hume's epistemology is the problem of induction. This may be the area of Hume's thought where his scepticism about human powers of reason is most pronounced.[79] The problem revolves around the plausibility of inductive reasoning, that is, reasoning from the observed behaviour of objects to their behaviour when unobserved. As Hume wrote, induction concerns how things behave when they go "beyond the present testimony of the senses, or the records of our memory".[80] Hume argues that we tend to believe that things behave in a regular manner, meaning that patterns in the behaviour of objects seem to persist into the future, and throughout the unobserved present.[81] Hume's argument is that we cannot rationally justify the claim that nature will continue to be uniform, as justification comes in only two varieties—demonstrative reasoning and probable reasoning[iii]—and both of these are inadequate. With regard to demonstrative reasoning, Hume argues that the uniformity principle cannot be demonstrated, as it is "consistent and conceivable" that nature might stop being regular.[82] Turning to probable reasoning, Hume argues that we cannot hold that nature will continue to be uniform because it has been in the past. As this is using the very sort of reasoning (induction) that is under question, it would be circular reasoning.[83] Thus, no form of justification will rationally warrant our inductive inferences.

Hume's solution to this problem is to argue that, rather than reason, natural instinct explains the human practice of making inductive inferences. He asserts that "Nature, by an absolute and uncontroulable [sic] necessity has determin'd us to judge as well as to breathe and feel." In 1985, and in agreement with Hume, John D. Kenyon writes:[84]

Reason might manage to raise a doubt about the truth of a conclusion of natural inductive inference just for a moment ... but the sheer agreeableness of animal faith will protect us from excessive caution and sterile suspension of belief.

Others, such as Charles Sanders Peirce, have demurred from Hume's solution,[85] while some, such as Kant and Karl Popper, have thought that Hume's analysis has "posed a most fundamental challenge to all human knowledge claims".[86]

The notion of causation is closely linked to the problem of induction. According to Hume, we reason inductively by associating constantly conjoined events. It is the mental act of association that is the basis of our concept of causation. At least three interpretations of Hume's theory of causation are represented in the literature:[87]

  1. the logical positivist;
  2. the sceptical realist; and
  3. the quasi-realist.

Hume acknowledged that there are events constantly unfolding, and humanity cannot guarantee that these events are caused by prior events or are independent instances. He opposed the widely accepted theory of causation that 'all events have a specific course or reason'. Therefore, Hume crafted his own theory of causation, formed through his empiricist and sceptic beliefs. He split causation into two realms: "All the objects of human reason or enquiry may naturally be divided into two kinds, to wit, Relations of Ideas, and Matters of Fact."[28] Relations of Ideas are a priori and represent universal bonds between ideas that mark the cornerstones of human thought. Matters of Fact are dependent on the observer and experience. They are often not universally held to be true among multiple persons. Hume was an Empiricist, meaning he believed "causes and effects are discoverable not by reason, but by experience".[28] He goes on to say that, even with the perspective of the past, humanity cannot dictate future events because thoughts of the past are limited, compared to the possibilities for the future. Hume's separation between Matters of Fact and Relations of Ideas is often referred to as "Hume's fork."[1]

Hume explains his theory of causation and causal inference by division into three different parts. In these three branches he explains his ideas and compares and contrasts his views to his predecessors. These branches are the Critical Phase, the Constructive Phase, and Belief.[88] In the Critical Phase, Hume denies his predecessors' theories of causation. Next, he uses the Constructive Phase to resolve any doubts the reader may have had while observing the Critical Phase. "Habit or Custom" mends the gaps in reasoning that occur without the human mind even realising it. Associating ideas has become second nature to the human mind. It "makes us expect for the future, a similar train of events with those which have appeared in the past".[28] However, Hume says that this association cannot be trusted because the span of the human mind to comprehend the past is not necessarily applicable to the wide and distant future. This leads him to the third branch of causal inference, Belief. Belief is what drives the human mind to hold that expectancy of the future is based on past experience. Throughout his explanation of causal inference, Hume is arguing that the future is not certain to be repetition of the past and that the only way to justify induction is through uniformity.

The logical positivist interpretation is that Hume analyses causal propositions, such as "A causes B", in terms of regularities in perception: "A causes B" is equivalent to "Whenever A-type events happen, B-type ones follow", where "whenever" refers to all possible perceptions.[89] In his Treatise of Human Nature, Hume wrote:[90]

Power and necessity…are…qualities of perceptions, not of objects…felt by the soul and not perceiv'd externally in bodies.

This view is rejected by sceptical realists, who argue that Hume thought that causation amounts to more than just the regular succession of events.[ii] Hume said that, when two events are causally conjoined, a necessary connection underpins the conjunction:[91]

Shall we rest contented with these two relations of contiguity and succession, as affording a complete idea of causation? By no means…there is a necessary connexion to be taken into consideration.

Angela Coventry writes that, for Hume, "there is nothing in any particular instance of cause and effect involving external objects which suggests the idea of power or necessary connection" and "we are ignorant of the powers that operate between objects".[92] However, while denying the possibility of knowing the powers between objects, Hume accepted the causal principle, writing: "I never asserted so absurd a proposition as that something could arise without a cause."[93]

It has been argued that, while Hume did not think that causation is reducible to pure regularity, he was not a fully-fledged realist either. Simon Blackburn calls this a quasi-realist reading,[94] saying that "Someone talking of cause is voicing a distinct mental set: he is by no means in the same state as someone merely describing regular sequences."[95] In Hume's words, "nothing is more usual than to apply to external bodies every internal sensation, which they occasion".[96]

'Self' edit

Empiricist philosophers, such as Hume and Berkeley, favoured the bundle theory of personal identity.[97] In this theory, "the mind itself, far from being an independent power, is simply 'a bundle of perceptions' without unity or cohesive quality".[98] The self is nothing but a bundle of experiences linked by the relations of causation and resemblance; or, more accurately, the empirically warranted idea of the self is just the idea of such a bundle. According to Hume:[70]

For my part, when I enter most intimately into what I call myself, I always stumble on some particular perception or other, of heat or cold, light or shade, love or hatred, pain or pleasure. I never can catch myself at any time without a perception, and never can observe any thing but the perception. When my perceptions are removed for any time, as by sound sleep; so long I am insensible of myself, and may truly be said not to exist.

— A Treatise of Human Nature, Book I.iv, section 6

This view is supported by, for example, positivist interpreters, who have seen Hume as suggesting that terms such as "self", "person", or "mind" refer to collections of "sense-contents".[99] A modern-day version of the bundle theory of the mind has been advanced by Derek Parfit in his Reasons and Persons.[100]

However, some philosophers have criticised Hume's bundle-theory interpretation of personal identity. They argue that distinct selves can have perceptions that stand in relation to similarity and causality. Thus, perceptions must already come parcelled into distinct "bundles" before they can be associated according to the relations of similarity and causality. In other words, the mind must already possess a unity that cannot be generated, or constituted, by these relations alone. Since the bundle-theory interpretation portrays Hume as answering an ontological question, philosophers like Galen Strawson see Hume as not very concerned with such questions and have queried whether this view is really Hume's. Instead, Strawson suggests that Hume might have been answering an epistemological question about the causal origin of our concept of the self.[101] In the Appendix to the Treatise, Hume declares himself dissatisfied with his earlier account of personal identity in Book 1. Corliss Swain notes that "Commentators agree that if Hume did find some new problem" when he reviewed the section on personal identity, "he wasn't forthcoming about its nature in the Appendix."[102] One interpretation of Hume's view of the self, argued for by philosopher and psychologist James Giles, is that Hume is not arguing for a bundle theory, which is a form of reductionism, but rather for an eliminative view of the self. Rather than reducing the self to a bundle of perceptions, Hume rejects the idea of the self altogether. On this interpretation, Hume is proposing a "no-self theory" and thus has much in common with Buddhist thought (see anattā).[103] Psychologist Alison Gopnik has argued that Hume was in a position to learn about Buddhist thought during his time in France in the 1730s.[104][105]

Practical reason edit

Practical reason relates to whether standards or principles exist that are also authoritative for all rational beings, dictating people's intentions and actions. Hume is mainly considered an anti-rationalist, denying the possibility for practical reason, although other philosophers such as Christine Korsgaard, Jean Hampton, and Elijah Millgram claim that Hume is not so much of an anti-rationalist as he is just a sceptic of practical reason.[106]

Hume denied the existence of practical reason as a principle because he claimed reason does not have any effect on morality, since morality is capable of producing effects in people that reason alone cannot create. As Hume explains in A Treatise of Human Nature (1740):[70]: 457 

Morals excite passions, and produce or prevent actions. Reason of itself is utterly impotent in this particular. The rules of morality, therefore, are not conclusions of our reason."

Since practical reason is supposed to regulate our actions (in theory), Hume denied practical reason on the grounds that reason cannot directly oppose passions. As Hume puts it, "Reason is, and ought only to be the slave of the passions, and can never pretend to any other office than to serve and obey them." Reason is less significant than any passion because reason has no original influence, while "A passion is an original existence, or, if you will, modification of existence."[70]: 415 

Practical reason is also concerned with the value of actions rather than the truth of propositions,[107] so Hume believed that reason's shortcoming of affecting morality proved that practical reason could not be authoritative for all rational beings, since morality was essential for dictating people's intentions and actions.

Ethics edit

Hume's writings on ethics began in the 1740 Treatise and were refined in his An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals (1751). He understood feeling, rather than knowing, as that which governs ethical actions, stating that "moral decisions are grounded in moral sentiment."[108] Arguing that reason cannot be behind morality, he wrote:[109]

Morals excite passions, and produce or prevent actions. Reason itself is utterly impotent in this particular. The rules of morality, therefore, are not conclusions of our reason.

Hume's moral sentimentalism was shared by his close friend Adam Smith,[110][failed verification] and the two were mutually influenced by the moral reflections of their older contemporary, Francis Hutcheson.[111] Peter Singer claims that Hume's argument that morals cannot have a rational basis alone "would have been enough to earn him a place in the history of ethics."[112]

Hume also put forward the is–ought problem, later known as Hume's Law,[112] denying the possibility of logically deriving what ought to be from what is. According to the Treatise (1740), in every system of morality that Hume has read, the author begins by stating facts about the world as it is but always ends up suddenly referring to what ought to be the case. Hume demands that a reason should be given for inferring what ought to be the case, from what is the case. This is because it "seems altogether inconceivable, how this new relation can be a deduction from others."[113]

Hume's theory of ethics has been influential in modern-day meta-ethical theory,[114] helping to inspire emotivism,[115] and ethical expressivism and non-cognitivism,[116][failed verification] as well as Allan Gibbard's general theory of moral judgment and judgments of rationality.[117]

Aesthetics edit

Hume's ideas about aesthetics and the theory of art are spread throughout his works, but are particularly connected with his ethical writings, and also the essays "Of the Standard of Taste" and "Of Tragedy" (1757). His views are rooted in the work of Joseph Addison and Francis Hutcheson.[118] In the Treatise (1740), he touches on the connection between beauty and deformity and vice and virtue.[119] His later writings on the subject continue to draw parallels of beauty and deformity in art with conduct and character.[120]

In "Standard of Taste", Hume argues that no rules can be drawn up about what is a tasteful object. However, a reliable critic of taste can be recognised as objective, sensible and unprejudiced, and as having extensive experience.[121] "Of Tragedy" addresses the question of why humans enjoy tragic drama. Hume was concerned with the way spectators find pleasure in the sorrow and anxiety depicted in a tragedy. He argued that this was because the spectator is aware that he is witnessing a dramatic performance. There is pleasure in realising that the terrible events that are being shown are actually fiction.[122] Furthermore, Hume laid down rules for educating people in taste and correct conduct, and his writings in this area have been very influential on English and Anglo-Saxon aesthetics.[123]

Free will, determinism, and responsibility edit

 
Statue of Hume, sculpted by Alexander Stoddart, on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh

Hume, along with Thomas Hobbes, is cited as a classical compatibilist about the notions of freedom and determinism.[124][125] Compatibilism seeks to reconcile human freedom with the mechanist view that human beings are part of a deterministic universe, which is completely governed by physical laws. Hume, on this point, was influenced greatly by the scientific revolution, particularly by Sir Isaac Newton.[126] Hume argued that the dispute between freedom and determinism continued over 2000 years due to ambiguous terminology. He wrote: "From this circumstance alone, that a controversy has been long kept on foot…we may presume that there is some ambiguity in the expression," and that different disputants use different meanings for the same terms.[127][128]

Hume defines the concept of necessity as "the uniformity, observable in the operations of nature; where similar objects are constantly conjoined together,"[129] and liberty as "a power of acting or not acting, according to the determinations of the will."[130] He then argues that, according to these definitions, not only are the two compatible, but liberty requires necessity. For if our actions were not necessitated in the above sense, they would "have so little in connexion with motives, inclinations and circumstances, that one does not follow with a certain degree of uniformity from the other." But if our actions are not thus connected to the will, then our actions can never be free: they would be matters of "chance; which is universally allowed to have no existence."[131] Australian philosopher John Passmore writes that confusion has arisen because "necessity" has been taken to mean "necessary connexion." Once this has been abandoned, Hume argues that "liberty and necessity will be found not to be in conflict one with another."[128]

Moreover, Hume goes on to argue that in order to be held morally responsible, it is required that our behaviour be caused or necessitated, for, as he wrote:[132]

Actions are, by their very nature, temporary and perishing; and where they proceed not from some cause in the character and disposition of the person who performed them, they can neither redound to his honour, if good; nor infamy, if evil.

Hume describes the link between causality and our capacity to rationally make a decision from this an inference of the mind. Human beings assess a situation based upon certain predetermined events and from that form a choice. Hume believes that this choice is made spontaneously. Hume calls this form of decision making the liberty of spontaneity.[133]

Education writer Richard Wright considers that Hume's position rejects a famous moral puzzle attributed to French philosopher Jean Buridan. The Buridan's ass puzzle describes a donkey that is hungry. This donkey has separate bales of hay on both sides, which are of equal distances from him. The problem concerns which bale the donkey chooses. Buridan was said to believe that the donkey would die, because he has no autonomy. The donkey is incapable of forming a rational decision as there is no motive to choose one bale of hay over the other. However, human beings are different, because a human who is placed in a position where he is forced to choose one loaf of bread over another will make a decision to take one in lieu of the other. For Buridan, humans have the capacity of autonomy, and he recognises the choice that is ultimately made will be based on chance, as both loaves of bread are exactly the same. However, Wright says that Hume completely rejects this notion, arguing that a human will spontaneously act in such a situation because he is faced with impending death if he fails to do so. Such a decision is not made on the basis of chance, but rather on necessity and spontaneity, given the prior predetermined events leading up to the predicament.[126]

Hume's argument is supported by modern-day compatibilists such as R. E. Hobart, a pseudonym of philosopher Dickinson S. Miller.[134] However, P. F. Strawson argued that the issue of whether we hold one another morally responsible does not ultimately depend on the truth or falsity of a metaphysical thesis such as determinism. This is because our so holding one another is a non-rational human sentiment that is not predicated on such theses.[135][136]

Religion edit

Philosopher Paul Russell (2005) contends that Hume wrote "on almost every central question in the philosophy of religion", and that these writings "are among the most important and influential contributions on this topic."[137] Touching on the philosophy, psychology, history, and anthropology of religious thought, Hume's 1757 dissertation "The Natural History of Religion" argues that the monotheistic religions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all derive from earlier polytheistic religions. He went on to suggest that all religious belief "traces, in the end, to dread of the unknown".[138] Hume had also written on religious subjects in the first Enquiry, as well as later in the Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion.[137]

Religious views edit

Although he wrote a great deal about religion, Hume's personal views have been the subject of much debate.[iv] Some modern critics have described Hume's religious views as agnostic or have described him as a "Pyrrhonian skeptic".[139] Contemporaries considered him to be an atheist, or at least un-Christian, enough so that the Church of Scotland seriously considered bringing charges of infidelity against him.[140] Evidence of his un-Christian beliefs can especially be found in his writings on miracles, in which he attempts to separate historical method from the narrative accounts of miracles.[139] Nevertheless, modern scholars have tended to dismiss the claims of Hume's contemporaries describing him as an atheist as coming from religiously intolerant people who did not understand Hume’s philosophy.[141] The fact that contemporaries suspected him of atheism is exemplified by a story Hume liked to tell:[142]

The best theologian he ever met, he used to say, was the old Edinburgh fishwife who, having recognized him as Hume the atheist, refused to pull him out of the bog into which he had fallen until he declared he was a Christian and repeated the Lord's prayer.

However, in works such as "Of Superstition and Enthusiasm", Hume specifically seems to support the standard religious views of his time and place.[143] This still meant that he could be very critical of the Catholic Church, dismissing it with the standard Protestant accusations of superstition and idolatry,[144][143]: 70  as well as dismissing as idolatry what his compatriots saw as uncivilised beliefs.[145] He also considered extreme Protestant sects, the members of which he called "enthusiasts", to be corrupters of religion.[146] By contrast, in "The Natural History of Religion", Hume presents arguments suggesting that polytheism had much to commend it over monotheism.[147] Additionally, when mentioning religion as a factor in his History of England, Hume uses it to show the deleterious effect it has on human progress. In his Treatise of Human Nature, Hume wrote: "Generally speaking, the errors in religions are dangerous; those in philosophy only ridiculous."[139]

Lou Reich (1998) argues that Hume was a religious naturalist and rejects interpretations of Hume as an atheist.[148] Paul Russell (2008) writes that Hume was plainly sceptical about religious belief, although perhaps not to the extent of complete atheism. He suggests that Hume's position is best characterised by the term "irreligion,"[149] while philosopher David O'Connor (2013) argues that Hume's final position was "weakly deistic". For O'Connor, Hume's "position is deeply ironic. This is because, while inclining towards a weak form of deism, he seriously doubts that we can ever find a sufficiently favourable balance of evidence to justify accepting any religious position." He adds that Hume "did not believe in the God of standard theism ... but he did not rule out all concepts of deity", and that "ambiguity suited his purposes, and this creates difficulty in definitively pinning down his final position on religion".[150]

Design argument edit

One of the traditional topics of natural theology is that of the existence of God, and one of the a posteriori arguments for this is the argument from design or the teleological argument. The argument is that the existence of God can be proved by the design that is obvious in the complexity of the world, which Encyclopædia Britannica states is "the most popular", because it is:[151][unreliable source?]

…the most accessible of the theistic arguments ... which identifies evidences of design in nature, inferring from them a divine designer ... The fact that the universe as a whole is a coherent and efficiently functioning system likewise, in this view, indicates a divine intelligence behind it.

In An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, Hume wrote that the design argument seems to depend upon our experience, and its proponents "always suppose the universe, an effect quite singular and unparalleled, to be the proof of a Deity, a cause no less singular and unparalleled".[152] Philosopher Louise E. Loeb (2010) notes that Hume is saying that only experience and observation can be our guide to making inferences about the conjunction between events. However, according to Hume:[153]

We observe neither God nor other universes, and hence no conjunction involving them. There is no observed conjunction to ground an inference either to extended objects or to God, as unobserved causes.

Hume also criticised the argument in his Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion (1779). In this, he suggested that, even if the world is a more or less smoothly functioning system, this may only be a result of the "chance permutations of particles falling into a temporary or permanent self-sustaining order, which thus has the appearance of design".[151][unreliable source?]

A century later, the idea of order without design was rendered more plausible by Charles Darwin's discovery that the adaptations of the forms of life result from the natural selection of inherited characteristics.[151][unreliable source?] For philosopher James D. Madden, it is "Hume, rivaled only by Darwin, [who] has done the most to undermine in principle our confidence in arguments from design among all figures in the Western intellectual tradition".[154]

Finally, Hume discussed a version of the anthropic principle, which is the idea that theories of the universe are constrained by the need to allow for man's existence in it as an observer. Hume has his sceptical mouthpiece Philo suggest that there may have been many worlds, produced by an incompetent designer, whom he called a "stupid mechanic". In his Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, Hume wrote:[155]

Many worlds might have been botched and bungled throughout an eternity, ere this system was struck out: much labour lost: many fruitless trials made: and a slow, but continued improvement carried on during infinite ages in the art of world-making.

Problem of miracles edit

In his discussion of miracles, Hume argues that we should not believe miracles have occurred and that they do not therefore provide us with any reason to think God exists.[156] In An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding (Section 10), Hume defines a miracle as "a transgression of a law of nature by a particular volition of the Deity, or by the interposition of some invisible agent". Hume says we believe an event that has frequently occurred is likely to occur again, but we also take into account those instances where the event did not occur:[157]

A wise man ... considers which side is supported by the greater number of experiments. ... A hundred instances or experiments on one side, and fifty on another, afford a doubtful expectation of any event; though a hundred uniform experiments, with only one that is contradictory, reasonably beget a pretty strong degree of assurance. In all cases, we must balance the opposite experiments ... and deduct the smaller number from the greater, in order to know the exact force of the superior evidence.

Hume discusses the testimony of those who report miracles. He wrote that testimony might be doubted even from some great authority in case the facts themselves are not credible: "[T]he evidence, resulting from the testimony, admits of a diminution, greater or less, in proportion as the fact is more or less unusual."[158]

Although Hume leaves open the possibility for miracles to occur and be reported, he offers various arguments against this ever having happened in history.[159] He points out that people often lie, and they have good reasons to lie about miracles occurring either because they believe they are doing so for the benefit of their religion or because of the fame that results. Furthermore, people by nature enjoy relating miracles they have heard without caring for their veracity and thus miracles are easily transmitted even when false. Also, Hume notes that miracles seem to occur mostly in "ignorant and barbarous nations"[160] and times, and the reason they do not occur in the civilised societies is such societies are not awed by what they know to be natural events. Hume recognizes that over a long period time, various coincidences can provide the appearance of intention. Finally, the miracles of each religion argue against all other religions and their miracles, and so even if a proportion of all reported miracles across the world fit Hume's requirement for belief, the miracles of each religion make the other less likely.[161]

Hume was extremely pleased with his argument against miracles in his Enquiry. He states, "I flatter myself, that I have discovered an argument of a like nature, which, if just, will, with the wise and learned, be an everlasting check to all kinds of superstitious delusion, and consequently, will be useful as long as the world endures."[162] Thus, Hume's argument against miracles had a more abstract basis founded upon the scrutiny, not just primarily of miracles, but of all forms of belief systems. It is a commonsense notion of veracity based upon epistemological evidence, and founded on a principle of rationality, proportionality and reasonability.[161]

The criterion for assessing Hume's belief system is based on the balance of probability whether something is more likely than not to have occurred. Since the weight of empirical experience contradicts the notion for the existence of miracles, such accounts should be treated with scepticism. Further, the myriad of accounts of miracles contradict one another, as some people who receive miracles will aim to prove the authority of Jesus, whereas others will aim to prove the authority of Muhammad or some other religious prophet or deity. These various differing accounts weaken the overall evidential power of miracles.[163][failed verification]

Despite all this, Hume observes that belief in miracles is popular, and that "the gazing populace… receive greedily, without examination, whatever soothes superstition, and promotes wonder."[164]

Critics have argued that Hume's position assumes the character of miracles and natural laws prior to any specific examination of miracle claims, thus it amounts to a subtle form of begging the question. To assume that testimony is a homogeneous reference group seems unwise- to compare private miracles with public miracles, unintellectual observers with intellectual observers and those who have little to gain and much to lose with those with much to gain and little to lose is not convincing to many. Indeed, many have argued that miracles not only do not contradict the laws of nature but require the laws of nature to be intelligible as miraculous, and thus subverting the law of nature. For example, William Adams remarks that "there must be an ordinary course of nature before anything can be extraordinary. There must be a stream before anything can be interrupted."[165] They have also noted that it requires an appeal to inductive inference, as none have observed every part of nature nor examined every possible miracle claim, for instance those in the future. This, in Hume's philosophy, was especially problematic.[166]

Little appreciated is the voluminous literature either foreshadowing Hume, in the likes of Thomas Sherlock[167] or directly responding to and engaging with Hume—from William Paley,[168] William Adams,[169] John Douglas,[170] John Leland,[171] and George Campbell,[172] among others. Regarding the latter, it is rumoured that, having read Campbell's Dissertation, Hume remarked that "the Scotch theologue had beaten him."[173]

Hume's main argument concerning miracles is that miracles by definition are singular events that differ from the established laws of nature. Such natural laws are codified as a result of past experiences. Therefore, a miracle is a violation of all prior experience and thus incapable on this basis of reasonable belief. However, the probability that something has occurred in contradiction of all past experience should always be judged to be less than the probability that either one's senses have deceived one, or the person recounting the miraculous occurrence is lying or mistaken, Hume would say, all of which he had past experience of. For Hume, this refusal to grant credence does not guarantee correctness. He offers the example of an Indian Prince, who, having grown up in a hot country, refuses to believe that water has frozen. By Hume's lights, this refusal is not wrong and the prince "reasoned justly;" it is presumably only when he has had extensive experience of the freezing of water that he has warrant to believe that the event could occur.[158]

So, for Hume, either the miraculous event will become a recurrent event or else it will never be rational to believe it occurred. The connection to religious belief is left unexplained throughout, except for the close of his discussion where Hume notes the reliance of Christianity upon testimony of miraculous occurrences. He makes an ironic remark that anyone who "is moved by faith to assent" to revealed testimony "is conscious of a continued miracle in his own person, which subverts all principles of his understanding, and gives him a determination to believe what is most contrary to custom and experience."[174][175] Hume writes that "All the testimony whichever was really given for any miracle, or ever will be given, is a subject of derision."[158]

As a historian of England edit

 
David Hume by Allan Ramsay, 1766; "Where men are the most sure and arrogant, they are commonly the most mistaken, and have there given reins to passion, without that proper deliberation and suspense, which can alone secure them from the grossest absurdities." —An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals, § 9.13 : Conclusion, Pt. 1 (1751)

From 1754 to 1762 Hume published The History of England, a six-volume work, that extends (according to its subtitle) "From the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution in 1688." Inspired by Voltaire's sense of the breadth of history, Hume widened the focus of the field away from merely kings, parliaments, and armies, to literature and science as well. He argued that the quest for liberty was the highest standard for judging the past, and concluded that after considerable fluctuation, England at the time of his writing had achieved "the most entire system of liberty that was ever known amongst mankind".[176] It "must be regarded as an event of cultural importance. In its own day, moreover, it was an innovation, soaring high above its very few predecessors."[177] Hume's History of England made him famous as a historian before he was ever considered a serious philosopher. In this work, Hume uses history to tell the story of the rise of England and what led to its greatness and the disastrous effects that religion has had on its progress. For Hume, the history of England's rise may give a template for others who would also like to rise to its current greatness.[139]

Hume's The History of England was profoundly impacted by his Scottish background. The science of sociology, which is rooted in Scottish thinking of the eighteenth century, had never before been applied to British philosophical history. Because of his Scottish background, Hume was able to bring an outsider's lens to English history that the insulated English whigs lacked.[29]: 122 

Hume's coverage of the political upheavals of the 17th century relied in large part on the Earl of Clarendon's History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England (1646–69). Generally, Hume took a moderate royalist position and considered revolution unnecessary to achieve necessary reform. Hume was considered a Tory historian and emphasised religious differences more than constitutional issues. Laird Okie explains that "Hume preached the virtues of political moderation, but ... it was moderation with an anti-Whig, pro-royalist coloring."[178] For "Hume shared the ... Tory belief that the Stuarts were no more high-handed than their Tudor predecessors".[179] "Even though Hume wrote with an anti-Whig animus, it is, paradoxically, correct to regard the History as an establishment work, one which implicitly endorsed the ruling oligarchy".[180] Historians have debated whether Hume posited a universal unchanging human nature, or allowed for evolution and development.[181]

The debate between Tory and the Whig historians can be seen in the initial reception to Hume's History of England. The whig-dominated world of 1754 overwhelmingly disapproved of Hume's take on English history. In later editions of the book, Hume worked to "soften or expunge many villainous whig strokes which had crept into it."[29]: 121 

Hume did not consider himself a pure Tory. Before 1745, he was more akin to an "independent whig." In 1748, he described himself as "a whig, though a very skeptical one." This description of himself as in between whiggism and toryism, helps one understand that his History of England should be read as his attempt to work out his own philosophy of history.[29]: 122 

Robert Roth argues that Hume's histories display his biases against Presbyterians and Puritans. Roth says his anti-Whig pro-monarchy position diminished the influence of his work, and that his emphasis on politics and religion led to a neglect of social and economic history.[182]

Hume was an early cultural historian of science. His short biographies of leading scientists explored the process of scientific change. He developed new ways of seeing scientists in the context of their times by looking at how they interacted with society and each other. He covers over forty scientists, with special attention paid to Francis Bacon, Robert Boyle, and Isaac Newton. Hume particularly praised William Harvey, writing about his treatise of the circulation of the blood: "Harvey is entitled to the glory of having made, by reasoning alone, without any mixture of accident, a capital discovery in one of the most important branches of science."[183]

The History became a best-seller and made Hume a wealthy man who no longer had to take up salaried work for others.[184] It was influential for nearly a century, despite competition from imitations by Smollett (1757), Goldsmith (1771) and others. By 1894, there were at least 50 editions as well as abridgements for students, and illustrated pocket editions, probably produced specifically for women.[185]

Political theory edit

Many of Hume's political ideas, such as limited government, private property when there is scarcity, and constitutionalism, are first principles of liberalism.[186] Thomas Jefferson banned the History from University of Virginia, feeling that it had "spread universal toryism over the land."[187] By comparison, Samuel Johnson thought Hume to be "a Tory by chance [...] for he has no principle. If he is anything, he is a Hobbist."[188] A major concern of Hume's political philosophy is the importance of the rule of law. He also stresses throughout his political essays the importance of moderation in politics, public spirit, and regard to the community.[189]

Throughout the period of the American Revolution, Hume had varying views. For instance, in 1768 he encouraged total revolt on the part of the Americans. In 1775, he became certain that a revolution would take place and said that he believed in the American principle and wished the British government would let them be. Hume's influence on some of the Founders can be seen in Benjamin Franklin's suggestion at the Philadelphia Convention of 1787 that no high office in any branch of government should receive a salary, which is a suggestion Hume had made in his emendation of James Harrington's Oceana.[190]

The legacy of religious civil war in 18th-century Scotland, combined with the relatively recent memory of the 1715 and 1745 Jacobite risings, had fostered in Hume a distaste for enthusiasm and factionalism. These appeared to him to threaten the fragile and nascent political and social stability of a country that was deeply politically and religiously divided.[191][failed verification] Hume thought that society is best governed by a general and impartial system of laws; he is less concerned about the form of government that administers these laws, so long as it does so fairly. However, he also clarified that a republic must produce laws, while "monarchy, when absolute, contains even something repugnant to law."[192]

Hume expressed suspicion of attempts to reform society in ways that departed from long-established custom, and he counselled peoples not to resist their governments except in cases of the most egregious tyranny.[193] However, he resisted aligning himself with either of Britain's two political parties, the Whigs and the Tories:[194]

My views of things are more conformable to Whig principles; my representations of persons to Tory prejudices.

The scholar Jerry Z. Muller argues that Hume's political thoughts have characteristics that later became typical for American and British conservatism, which contain more positive views of capitalism than conservatism does elsewhere.[195] Canadian philosopher Neil McArthur writes that Hume believed that we should try to balance our demands for liberty with the need for strong authority, without sacrificing either. McArthur characterises Hume as a "precautionary conservative,"[196]: 124  whose actions would have been "determined by prudential concerns about the consequences of change, which often demand we ignore our own principles about what is ideal or even legitimate."[196][failed verification] Hume supported the liberty of the press, and was sympathetic to democracy, when suitably constrained. American historian Douglass Adair has argued that Hume was a major inspiration for James Madison's writings, and the essay "Federalist No. 10" in particular.[197]

Hume offered his view on the best type of society in an essay titled "Idea of a Perfect Commonwealth", which lays out what he thought was the best form of government. He hoped that "in some future age, an opportunity might be afforded of reducing the theory to practice, either by a dissolution of some old government, or by the combination of men to form a new one, in some distant part of the world". He defended a strict separation of powers, decentralisation, extending the franchise to anyone who held property of value and limiting the power of the clergy. The system of the Swiss militia was proposed as the best form of protection. Elections were to take place on an annual basis and representatives were to be unpaid.[198] Political philosophers Leo Strauss and Joseph Cropsey, writing of Hume's thoughts about "the wise statesman", note that he "will bear a reverence to what carries the marks of age." Also, if he wishes to improve a constitution, his innovations will take account of the "ancient fabric", in order not to disturb society.[199]

In the political analysis of philosopher George Holland Sabine, the scepticism of Hume extended to the doctrine of government by consent. He notes that "allegiance is a habit enforced by education and consequently as much a part of human nature as any other motive."[200]

In the 1770s, Hume was critical of British policies toward the American colonies and advocated for American independence. He wrote in 1771 that "our union with America…in the nature of things, cannot long subsist."[57]

Contributions to economic thought edit

 
Statues of David Hume and Adam Smith by David Watson Stevenson on the Scottish National Portrait Gallery in Edinburgh

Hume expressed his economic views in his Political Discourses, which were incorporated in Essays and Treatises as Part II of Essays, Moral and Political.[7] To what extent he was influenced by Adam Smith is difficult to assess; however, both of them had similar principles supported from historical events.[7] At the same time Hume did not demonstrate concrete system of economic theory which could be observed in Smith's Wealth of Nations. However, he introduced several new ideas around which the "classical economics" of the 18th century was built.[7] Through his discussions on politics, Hume developed many ideas that are prevalent in the field of economics. This includes ideas on private property, inflation, and foreign trade.[201] Referring to his essay "Of the Balance of Trade", economist Paul Krugman (2012) has remarked that "David Hume created what I consider the first true economic model."[202]

In contrast to Locke, Hume believes that private property is not a natural right. Hume argues it is justified, because resources are limited. Private property would be an unjustified, "idle ceremonial," if all goods were unlimited and available freely.[203] Hume also believed in an unequal distribution of property, because perfect equality would destroy the ideas of thrift and industry. Perfect equality would thus lead to impoverishment.[204][205]

David Hume anticipated modern monetarism. First, Hume contributed to the theory of quantity and of interest rate. Hume has been credited with being the first to prove that, on an abstract level, there is no quantifiable amount of nominal money that a country needs to thrive. He understood that there was a difference between nominal and real money.

Second, Hume has a theory of causation which fits in with the Chicago-school "black box" approach. According to Hume, cause and effect are related only through correlation. Hume shared the belief with modern monetarists that changes in the supply of money can affect consumption and investment.

Lastly, Hume was a vocal advocate of a stable private sector, though also having some non-monetarist aspects to his economic philosophy. Having a stated preference for rising prices, for instance, Hume considered government debt to be a sort of substitute for actual money, referring to such debt as "a kind of paper credit." He also believed in heavy taxation, believing that it increases effort. Hume's economic approach evidently resembles his other philosophies, in that he does not choose one side indefinitely, but sees gray in the situation[206]

Legacy edit

 
Hume's statue on Edinburgh's Royal Mile, sculpted by Alexander Stoddart

Due to Hume's vast influence on contemporary philosophy, a large number of approaches in contemporary philosophy and cognitive science are today called "Humean."[12]

The writings of Thomas Reid, a Scottish philosopher and contemporary of Hume, were often critical of Hume's scepticism. Reid formulated his common sense philosophy, in part, as a reaction against Hume's views.[207]

Hume influenced, and was influenced by, the Christian philosopher Joseph Butler. Hume was impressed by Butler's way of thinking about religion, and Butler may well have been influenced by Hume's writings.[208][137]

Attention to Hume's philosophical works grew after the German philosopher Immanuel Kant, in his Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics (1783), credited Hume with awakening him from his "dogmatic slumber."[209]

According to Arthur Schopenhauer, "there is more to be learned from each page of David Hume than from the collected philosophical works of Hegel, Herbart and Schleiermacher taken together."[210]

A. J. Ayer, while introducing his classic exposition of logical positivism in 1936, claimed:[211]

The views which are put forward in this treatise derive from…doctrines…which are themselves the logical outcome of the empiricism of Berkeley and David Hume.

Albert Einstein, in 1915, wrote that he was inspired by Hume's positivism when formulating his theory of special relativity.[212][213]

Hume's problem of induction was also of fundamental importance to the philosophy of Karl Popper. In his autobiography, Unended Quest, he wrote: "Knowledge ... is objective; and it is hypothetical or conjectural. This way of looking at the problem made it possible for me to reformulate Hume's problem of induction." This insight resulted in Popper's major work The Logic of Scientific Discovery.[214] In his Conjectures and Refutations, he wrote:[215]

I approached the problem of induction through Hume. Hume, I felt, was perfectly right in pointing out that induction cannot be logically justified.

Hume's rationalism in religious subjects influenced, via German-Scottish theologian Johann Joachim Spalding, the German neology school and rational theology, and contributed to the transformation of German theology in the Age of Enlightenment.[216][217] Hume pioneered a comparative history of religion,[218][219] tried to explain various rites and traditions as being based on deception[220][221] and challenged various aspects of rational and natural theology, such as the argument from design.[218]

Danish theologian and philosopher Søren Kierkegaard adopted "Hume's suggestion that the role of reason is not to make us wise but to reveal our ignorance," though taking it as a reason for the necessity of religious faith, or fideism. The "fact that Christianity is contrary to reason…is the necessary precondition for true faith."[222] Political theorist Isaiah Berlin, who has also pointed out the similarities between the arguments of Hume and Kierkegaard against rational theology,[222] has written about Hume's influence on what Berlin calls the counter-Enlightenment and on German anti-rationalism.[223] Berlin has also once said of Hume that "no man has influenced the history of philosophy to a deeper or more disturbing degree."[224]

In 2003 philosopher Jerry Fodor, described Hume's Treatise as "the founding document of cognitive science."[225][226]

Hume engaged with contemporary intellectuals including Jean-Jacques Rousseau, James Boswell, and Adam Smith (who acknowledged Hume's influence on his economics and political philosophy).

Morris and Brown (2019) write that Hume is "generally regarded as one of the most important philosophers to write in English."[1]

In September 2020, the David Hume Tower, a University of Edinburgh building, was renamed to 40 George Square; this was following a campaign led by students of the university to rename it, in objection to Hume's writings related to race.[227][228][229][230]

Works edit

  • 1734. A Kind of History of My Life. – MSS 23159 National Library of Scotland.[32][76]
    • A letter to an unnamed physician, asking for advice about "the Disease of the Learned" that then afflicted him. Here he reports that at the age of eighteen "there seem'd to be open'd up to me a new Scene of Thought" that made him "throw up every other Pleasure or Business" and turned him to scholarship.[32]
  • 1739–1740. A Treatise of Human Nature: Being an Attempt to introduce the experimental Method of Reasoning into Moral Subjects.[70]
    • Hume intended to see whether the Treatise of Human Nature met with success, and if so, to complete it with books devoted to Politics and Criticism. However, as Hume explained, "It fell dead-born from the press, without reaching such distinction as even to excite a murmur among the zealots"[14]: 352  and so his further project was not completed.
  • 1740. An Abstract of a Book lately Published: Entitled A Treatise of Human Nature etc.
    • Anonymously published, but almost certainly written by Hume[v] in an attempt to popularise his Treatise. This work is of considerable philosophical interest as it spells out what Hume considered "The Chief Argument" of the Treatise, in a way that seems to anticipate the structure of the Enquiry concerning Human Understanding.
  • 1741. Essays, Moral, Political, and Literary (2st ed.)[231]
    • A collection of pieces written and published over many years, though most were collected together in 1753–54. Many of the essays are on politics and economics; other topics include aesthetic judgement, love, marriage and polygamy, and the demographics of ancient Greece and Rome. The Essays show some influence from Addison's Tatler and The Spectator, which Hume read avidly in his youth.
  • 1745. A Letter from a Gentleman to His Friend in Edinburgh: Containing Some Observations on a Specimen of the Principles concerning Religion and Morality, said to be maintain'd in a Book lately publish'd, intituled A Treatise of Human Nature etc.
    • Contains a letter written by Hume to defend himself against charges of atheism and scepticism, while applying for a chair at Edinburgh University.
  • 1742. "Of Essay Writing."[232]
  • 1748. An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding.
    • Contains reworking of the main points of the Treatise, Book 1, with the addition of material on free will (adapted from Book 2), miracles, the Design Argument, and mitigated scepticism. Of Miracles, section X of the Enquiry, was often published separately.
  • 1751. An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals.
    • A reworking of material on morality from Book 3 of the Treatise, but with a significantly different emphasis. It "was thought by Hume to be the best of his writings."[233]
  • 1752. Political Discourses (part II of Essays, Moral, Political, and Literary within the larger Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects, vol. 1).
    • Included in Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects (1753–56) reprinted 1758–77.
  • 1752–1758. Political Discourses/Discours politiques
  • 1757. Four Dissertations includes 4 essays:
    • "The Natural History of Religion"
    • "Of the Passions"
    • "Of Tragedy"
    • "Of the Standard of Taste"
  • 1754–1762. The History of England – sometimes referred to as The History of Great Britain.[234]
    • More a category of books than a single work, Hume's history spanned "from the invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution of 1688" and went through over 100 editions. Many considered it the standard history of England in its day.
  • 1760. "Sister Peg"
    • Hume claimed to have authored an anonymous political pamphlet satirizing the failure of the British Parliament to create a Scottish militia in 1760. Although the authorship of the work is disputed, Hume wrote Dr. Alexander Carlyle in early 1761 claiming authorship. The readership of the time attributed the work to Adam Ferguson, a friend and associate of Hume's who has been sometimes called "the founder of modern sociology." Some contemporary scholars concur in the judgment that Ferguson, not Hume, was the author of this work.
  • 1776. "My Own Life."[14]
    • Penned in April, shortly before his death, this autobiography was intended for inclusion in a new edition of Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects. It was first published by Adam Smith, who claimed that by doing so he had incurred "ten times more abuse than the very violent attack I had made upon the whole commercial system of Great Britain."[235]
  • 1777. "Essays on Suicide and the Immortality of the Soul."[236]
  • 1779. Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion.
    • Published posthumously by his nephew, David Hume the Younger. Being a discussion among three fictional characters concerning the nature of God, and is an important portrayal of the argument from design. Despite some controversy, most scholars agree that the view of Philo, the most sceptical of the three, comes closest to Hume's own.

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "The Faculty of Advocates chose me their Librarian, an office from which I received little or no emolument, but which gave me the command of a large library." (Hume 1776:11).
  2. ^ a b For example, see Craig (1987, Ch. 2); Strawson (2014); and Wright (1983).
  3. ^ These are Hume's terms. In modern parlance, demonstration may be termed deductive reasoning, while probability may be termed inductive reasoning. Millican, Peter. 1996. . Leeds: University of Leeds. Archived from the original on 20 October 2017. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  4. ^ For example, see Russell (2008); O'Connor (2013); and Norton (1993).
  5. ^ For this, see: Keynes, J. M. and P. Sraffa. 1965. "Introduction." In An Abstract of A Treatise of Human Nature, by D. Hume (1740). Connecticut: Archon Books

Citations edit

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  2. ^ Fumerton, Richard (21 February 2000). "Foundationalist Theories of Epistemic Justification". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 19 August 2018.
  3. ^ Demeter, Tamás (2016). David Hume and the culture of Scottish Newtonianism : methodology and ideology in Enlightenment inquiry. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-32731-3. OCLC 960722703.
  4. ^ David Bostock, Philosophy of Mathematics: An Introduction, Wiley-Blackwell, 2009, p. 43: "All of Descartes, Locke, Berkeley, and Hume supposed that mathematics is a theory of our ideas, but none of them offered any argument for this conceptualist claim, and apparently took it to be uncontroversial."
  5. ^ The Problem of Perception (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy): "Paraphrasing David Hume (1739...; see also Locke 1690, Berkeley 1710, Russell 1912): nothing is ever directly present to the mind in perception except perceptual appearances."
  6. ^ David, Marian (3 October 2018). "The Correspondence Theory of Truth". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University – via Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  7. ^ a b c d Cranston, Maurice, and Thomas Edmund Jessop. 2020 [1999] "David Hume." Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  8. ^ Harris, M. H. 1966. "David Hume". Library Quarterly 36 (April): 88–98.
  9. ^ a b Atherton 1999, p. ?.
  10. ^ Berlin, Isaiah (2013). The Roots of Romanticism (2nd ed.). Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691156200.
  11. ^ Hume 1739, p. 415.
  12. ^ a b c Garrett, Don. 2015. Hume (reprint ed.). London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-28334-2.
  13. ^ "Hume on Free Will". stanford.edu. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. 2016.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Hume, David. 1778 [1776]. "." In The History of England, from the Invasion of Julius Cæsar to the Revolution in 1688 1. London. Archived from the original on 13 August 2015. Also available . Retrieved 18 May 2020.
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  17. ^ Mossner 1958, pp. 30–33, quoted in Wright (2009, p. 10)
  18. ^ Harris 2004, p. 35.
  19. ^ Hume 1993, p. 346.
  20. ^ Johnson 1995, pp. 8–9.
  21. ^ a b Mossner 1950, p. 193.
  22. ^ Hume, David. 1932 [1734] "Letter to a [Dr George Cheyne]". pp. 13–15 in The Letters of David Hume 1, edited by J. Y. T. Greig. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-186158-1. doi:10.1093/actrade/9780199693245.book.1.
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  24. ^ Wright, John P. 2003. "Dr. George Cheyne, Chevalier Ramsay, and Hume's Letter to a Physician." Hume Studies 29(1):125–141. – via Project MUSE. doi:10.1353/hms.2011.0100.
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  34. ^ Norton 1993, p. 31.
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  46. ^ Emerson 2009, p. 98.
  47. ^ . millar-project.ed.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 15 January 2016. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
  48. ^ Grants Old and New Edinburgh vol 1, p. 97
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  52. ^ Mossner 1980, p. 285.
  53. ^ Waldmann, Felix, ed. 2014. Further Letters of David Hume 27 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine. Edinburgh: Edinburgh Bibliographical Society. pp. 65–69. – via Academia.edu.
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  60. ^ Stanley, Liz. 2006. "." Auto/Biography 14:1–19. doi:10.1191/0967550706ab051oa.
  61. ^ a b Siebert, Donald T. 1984. "." Studies in Scottish Literature 19(1):132–147. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
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  66. ^ Mossner 1980, p. 591.
  67. ^ Burton 1846, pp. 384–385.
  68. ^ Burton 1846, p. 436, footnote 1.
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  82. ^ Hume 1777, p. 111.
  83. ^ Hume 1777, p. 115.
  84. ^ Kenyon & Craig 1985, p. 254.
  85. ^ Harris 2004, p. 42.
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  87. ^ Read & Richman 2002, pp. 13–14, 69.
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  89. ^ For this account of Hume's views on causation cf. Ayer (1946, pp. 40–42)
  90. ^ Hume 1739, p. 167.
  91. ^ Hume 1739, p. 78, original emphasis
  92. ^ Coventry 2006, pp. 91–92.
  93. ^ Hume 2011, p. 187.
  94. ^ Blackburn 1990, p. ?.
  95. ^ Quoted by Dauer (2010, p. 97)
  96. ^ Hume 1777, p. 78, fn 17.
  97. ^ Dicker 2002, p. 15.
  98. ^ Maurer 2013.
  99. ^ Ayer 1946, pp. 135–136.
  100. ^ Parfit 1984, p. ?.
  101. ^ Strawson 2011, p. ?.
  102. ^ Swain 2008, p. 142.
  103. ^ Giles 1993, p. ?.
  104. ^ Gopnik 2009, p. ?.
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  110. ^ Hume 2013, p. 548.
  111. ^ Taylor 1965, p. ?.
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  113. ^ Hume 1739, p. 470.
  114. ^ Edwards 2002, p. 44.
  115. ^ Humber 2008, p. 136.
  116. ^ Brown 2005, pp. 97–100.
  117. ^ Angier 2012, p. 114.
  118. ^ Gracyk 2011, ch. 1.
  119. ^ Hume 1739, Sect. VII and Sect VIII, pp. 295–304.
  120. ^ Costelloe 2013, p. viii.
  121. ^ Harris 2013, p. 401.
  122. ^ Schmidt 2010, pp. 325–326.
  123. ^ Scruton 2014, p. 18.
  124. ^ McKenna & Coates 2015, Ch. 3.
  125. ^ Russell 1995.
  126. ^ a b Wright 2010, p. ?.
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  128. ^ a b Passmore 2013, p. 73.
  129. ^ Hume 1777, p. 82.
  130. ^ Hume 1777, p. 95.
  131. ^ Hume 1777, p. 96.
  132. ^ Hume 1777, p. 98, original emphasis
  133. ^ Mounce & Mounce 2002, p. 66.
  134. ^ See e.g. Hobart (1934, p. ?) and Carroll & Markosian (2010, p. 54, note 11)
  135. ^ Strawson 2008, p. ?.
  136. ^ Prasad 1995, p. 348.
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  153. ^ Loeb 2010, p. 118.
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  180. ^ Okie 1985, p. 27.
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  182. ^ Roth 1991, p. ?.
  183. ^ Wertz 1993, p. ?.
  184. ^ Morris & Brown 2011, Chapter Life and Works.
  185. ^ Phillipson 2012, p. 131.
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  • Wertz, S. K. (1993). "Hume and the Historiography of Science". Journal of the History of Ideas. 54 (3): 411–436. doi:10.2307/2710021. JSTOR 2710021.
  • Wiley, James (2012). Theory and Practice in the Philosophy of David Hume. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-137-02643-9.
  • Wright, John P. (2009). Hume's 'A Treatise of Human Nature': An Introduction. Cambridge Introductions to Key Philosophical Texts. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-83376-9.
  • Wright, John P. (1983). The Sceptical Realism of David Hume. Studies in intellectual history and the history of philosophy. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7190-0882-5.
  • Wright, Richard (2010). Understanding Religious Ethics: A Complete Guide for OCR AS and A2. Studies in intellectual history and the history of philosophy. Oxford University Press.


Further reading edit

  • Adamson, Robert; Mitchell, John Malcolm (1911). "Hume, David" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). pp. 876–884.
  • Ardal, Pall (1966). Passion and Value in Hume's Treatise, Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press.
  • Bailey, Alan & O'Brien, Dan (eds.) (2012). The Continuum Companion to Hume, New York: Continuum.
  • Bailey, Alan & O'Brien, Dan. (2014). Hume's Critique of Religion: Sick Men's Dreams, Dordrecht: Springer.
  • Beauchamp, Tom & Rosenberg, Alexander (1981). Hume and the Problem of Causation, New York, Oxford University Press.
  • Beveridge, Craig (1982), review of The Life of David Hume by Ernest Campbell Mossner, in Murray, Glen (ed.), Cencrastus No. 8, Spring 1982, p. 46, ISSN 0264-0856
  • Campbell Mossner, Ernest (1980). The Life of David Hume, Oxford University Press.
  • Gilles Deleuze (1953). Empirisme et subjectivité. Essai sur la Nature Humaine selon Hume, Paris: Presses Universitaires de France; trans. Empiricism and Subjectivity, New York: Columbia University Press, 1991.
  • Demeter, Tamás (2012). "Hume's Experimental Method". British Journal for the History of Philosophy. 20 (3): 577. doi:10.1080/09608788.2012.670842. hdl:11858/00-001M-0000-002A-7F3A-B. S2CID 170120193.
  • Demeter, Tamás (2014). "Natural Theology as Superstition: Hume and the Changing Ideology of Moral Inquiry." In Demeter, T. et al. (eds.), Conflicting Values of Inquiry, Leiden: Brill.
  • Garrett, Don (1996). Cognition and Commitment in Hume's Philosophy. New York & Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Gaskin, J.C.A. (1978). Hume's Philosophy of Religion. Humanities Press International.
  • Harris, James A. (2015). Hume: An Intellectual Biography. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Hesselberg, A. Kenneth (1961). Hume, Natural Law and Justice. Duquesne Review, Spring 1961, pp. 46–47.
  • Kail, P. J. E. (2007) Projection and Realism in Hume's Philosophy, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Kemp Smith, Norman (1941). The Philosophy of David Hume. London: Macmillan.
  • Narveson, Jan; Trenchard, David (2008). "Hume, David (1711–1776)". In Hamowy, Ronald (ed.). Nozick, Robert (1938–2002). The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE; Cato Institute. pp. 230–231. doi:10.4135/9781412965811.n220. ISBN 978-1412965804.
  • Norton, David Fate (1982). David Hume: Common-Sense Moralist, Sceptical Metaphysician. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  • Norton, David Fate & Taylor, Jacqueline (eds.) (2009). The Cambridge Companion to Hume, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Radcliffe, Elizabeth S. (ed.) (2008). A Companion to Hume, Malden: Blackwell.
  • Rosen, Frederick (2003). Classical Utilitarianism from Hume to Mill (Routledge Studies in Ethics & Moral Theory). ISBN 978-0-415-22094-1
  • Russell, Paul (1995). Freedom and Moral Sentiment: Hume's Way of Naturalizing Responsibility. New York & Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Russell, Paul (2008). The Riddle of Hume's Treatise: Skepticism, Naturalism and Irreligion. New York & Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Stroud, Barry (1977). Hume, London & New York: Routledge. (Complete study of Hume's work parting from the interpretation of Hume's naturalistic philosophical programme).
  • Wei, Jua (2017). Commerce and Politics in Hume’s History of England, Woodbridge: Boydell and Brewer online review
  • Willis, Andre C (2015). Toward a Humean True Religion: Genuine Theism, Moderate Hope, and Practical Morality, University Park: Penn State University Press.
  • Wilson, Fred (2008). The External World and Our Knowledge of It : Hume's critical realism, an exposition and a defence, Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

External links edit

Causation, Imagination, Moral Philosophy, Religion
  • The Hume Society, publishes Hume Studies and holds conferences

david, hume, other, people, named, disambiguation, juː, born, david, home, april, 1711, august, 1776, scottish, enlightenment, philosopher, historian, economist, librarian, essayist, best, known, today, highly, influential, system, philosophical, empiricism, s. For other people named David Hume see David Hume disambiguation David Hume h juː m born David Home 7 May NS 26 April OS 1711 25 August 1776 7 was a Scottish Enlightenment philosopher historian economist librarian 8 and essayist who is best known today for his highly influential system of philosophical empiricism skepticism and naturalism 1 Beginning with A Treatise of Human Nature 1739 40 Hume strove to create a naturalistic science of man that examined the psychological basis of human nature Hume followed John Locke in rejecting the existence of innate ideas concluding that all human knowledge derives solely from experience This places him with Francis Bacon Thomas Hobbes John Locke and George Berkeley as an empiricist 9 David HumeDavid Hume by Allan Ramsay 1754BornDavid Home7 May NS 26 April OS 1711 Lawnmarket Edinburgh ScotlandDied25 August 1776 1776 08 25 aged 65 New Town Edinburgh ScotlandEducationUniversity of EdinburghEra18th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolScottish Enlightenment Humeanism Naturalism 1 Scepticism Empiricism Irreligion Foundationalism 2 Newtonianism 3 Conceptualism 4 Indirect realism 5 Correspondence theory of truth 6 Moral sentimentalismMain interestsAesthetics Economics Epistemology Ethics Metaphysics Philosophy of mind Philosophy of religion Political philosophyNotable ideasList Problem of causation Problem of induction Constant conjunction Bundle theory Association of ideas Is ought problem Fact value distinction Impression idea distinction Personal Identity Hume s fork Deductive and inductive reasoning Science of man Moral sentimentsHume argued that inductive reasoning and belief in causality cannot be justified rationally instead they result from custom and mental habit We never actually perceive that one event causes another but only experience the constant conjunction of events This problem of induction means that to draw any causal inferences from past experience it is necessary to presuppose that the future will resemble the past a metaphysical presupposition which cannot itself be grounded in prior experience 10 An opponent of philosophical rationalists Hume held that passions rather than reason govern human behaviour famously proclaiming that Reason is and ought only to be the slave of the passions 9 11 Hume was also a sentimentalist who held that ethics are based on emotion or sentiment rather than abstract moral principle He maintained an early commitment to naturalistic explanations of moral phenomena and is usually accepted by historians of European philosophy to have first clearly expounded the is ought problem or the idea that a statement of fact alone can never give rise to a normative conclusion of what ought to be done 12 Hume denied that humans have an actual conception of the self positing that we experience only a bundle of sensations and that the self is nothing more than this bundle of perceptions connected by an association of ideas Hume s compatibilist theory of free will takes causal determinism as fully compatible with human freedom 13 His philosophy of religion including his rejection of miracles and of the argument from design for God s existence were especially controversial for their time Hume left a legacy that affected utilitarianism logical positivism the philosophy of science early analytic philosophy cognitive science theology and many other fields and thinkers Immanuel Kant credited Hume as the inspiration that had awakened him from his dogmatic slumbers Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Disease of the learned 2 Career 2 1 1730s 2 2 1740s 2 3 1750s 1760s 3 Later life 3 1 Autobiography 3 2 Death 4 Writings 4 1 Impressions and ideas 4 1 1 Simple and complex 4 1 2 Principles of association 4 2 Induction and causation 4 3 Self 4 4 Practical reason 4 5 Ethics 4 6 Aesthetics 4 7 Free will determinism and responsibility 4 8 Religion 4 8 1 Religious views 4 8 2 Design argument 4 8 3 Problem of miracles 4 9 As a historian of England 4 10 Political theory 4 11 Contributions to economic thought 5 Legacy 6 Works 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life editHume was born on 26 April 1711 Old Style as David Home in a tenement on the north side of Edinburgh s Lawnmarket He was the second of two sons born to Catherine Home nee Falconer daughter of Sir David Falconer of Newton Midlothian and his wife Mary Falconer nee Norvell 14 and Joseph Home of Chirnside in the County of Berwick an advocate of Ninewells Joseph died just after David s second birthday Catherine who never remarried raised the two brothers and their sister on her own 15 Hume changed his family name s spelling in 1734 as the surname Home pronounced as Hume was not well known in England Hume never married and lived partly at his Chirnside family home in Berwickshire which had belonged to the family since the 16th century His finances as a young man were very slender as his family was not rich as a younger son he had little patrimony to live on 16 Hume attended the University of Edinburgh at an unusually early age either 12 or possibly as young as 10 at a time when 14 was the typical age Initially Hume considered a career in law because of his family However in his words he came to have 16 an insurmountable aversion to everything but the pursuits of Philosophy and general Learning and while my family fanceyed I was poring over Voet and Vinnius Cicero and Virgil were the Authors which I was secretly devouring He had little respect for the professors of his time telling a friend in 1735 that there is nothing to be learnt from a Professor which is not to be met with in Books 17 He did not graduate 18 Disease of the learned edit At age 18 or so Hume made a philosophical discovery that opened up to him a new Scene of Thought inspiring him to throw up every other Pleasure or Business to apply entirely to it 19 As he did not recount what this scene exactly was commentators have offered a variety of speculations 20 One prominent interpretation among contemporary Humean scholarship is that this new scene of thought was Hume s realisation that Francis Hutcheson s theory of moral sense could be applied to the understanding of morality as well From this inspiration Hume set out to spend a minimum of 10 years reading and writing He soon came to the verge of a mental breakdown first starting with a coldness which he attributed to a Laziness of Temper that lasted about nine months Later some scurvy spots broke out on his fingers persuading Hume s physician to diagnose Hume as suffering from the Disease of the Learned Hume wrote that he went under a Course of Bitters and Anti Hysteric Pills taken along with a pint of claret every day He also decided to have a more active life to better continue his learning 21 His health improved somewhat but in 1731 he was afflicted with a ravenous appetite and palpitations After eating well for a time he went from being tall lean and raw bon d to being sturdy robust and healthful like 22 23 24 Indeed Hume would become well known for being obese and having a fondness for good port and cheese often using them as philosophical metaphors for his conjectures 25 Career editAlthough having noble ancestry at age 25 Hume had no source of income and no learned profession As was common at his time he became a merchant s assistant despite having to leave his native Scotland He travelled via Bristol to La Fleche in Anjou France There he had frequent discourse with the Jesuits of the College of La Fleche 26 Hume was derailed in his attempts to start a university career by protests over his alleged atheism 27 28 also lamenting that his literary debut A Treatise of Human Nature fell dead born from the press 14 However he found literary success in his lifetime as an essayist and a career as a librarian at the University of Edinburgh These successes provided him much needed income at the time His tenure there and the access to research materials it provided resulted in Hume s writing the massive six volume The History of England which became a bestseller and the standard history of England in its day For over 60 years Hume was the dominant interpreter of English history 29 120 He described his love for literary fame as his ruling passion 14 and judged his two late works the so called first and second enquiries An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding and An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals as his greatest literary and philosophical achievements 14 He would ask of his contemporaries to judge him on the merits of the later texts alone rather than on the more radical formulations of his early youthful work dismissing his philosophical debut as juvenilia A work which the Author had projected before he left College 30 Despite Hume s protestations a consensus exists today that his most important arguments and philosophically distinctive doctrines are found in the original form they take in the Treatise Though he was only 23 years old when starting this work it is now regarded as one of the most important in the history of Western philosophy 12 1730s edit Hume worked for four years on his first major work A Treatise of Human Nature subtitled Being an Attempt to Introduce the Experimental Method of Reasoning into Moral Subjects completing it in 1738 at age 28 Although many scholars today consider the Treatise to be Hume s most important work and one of the most important books in Western philosophy critics in Great Britain at the time described it as abstract and unintelligible 31 As Hume had spent most of his savings during those four years 21 he resolved to make a very rigid frugality supply his deficiency of fortune to maintain unimpaired his independency and to regard every object as contemptible except the improvements of his talents in literature 32 352 Despite the disappointment Hume later wrote Being naturally of a cheerful and sanguine temper I soon recovered from the blow and prosecuted with great ardour my studies in the country 32 352 There in an attempt to make his larger work better known and more intelligible he published the An Abstract of a Book lately Published as a summary of the main doctrines of the Treatise without revealing its authorship 33 This work contained the same ideas but with a shorter and clearer explanation Although there has been some academic speculation as to who actually wrote this pamphlet 34 it is generally regarded as Hume s creation 35 1740s edit After the publication of Essays Moral and Political in 1741 included in the later edition as Essays Moral Political and Literary Hume applied for the Chair of Pneumatics and Moral Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh However the position was given to William Cleghorn 36 after Edinburgh ministers petitioned the town council not to appoint Hume because he was seen as an atheist 37 nbsp An engraving of Hume from the first volume of his The History of England 1754In 1745 during the Jacobite risings Hume tutored the Marquess of Annandale an engagement that ended in disarray after about a year The Marquess could not follow with Hume s lectures his father saw little need for philosophy and on a personal level the Marquess found Hume s dietary tendencies to be bizarre 38 Hume then started his great historical work The History of England which took fifteen years and ran to over a million words During this time he was also involved with the Canongate Theatre through his friend John Home a preacher 39 In this context he associated with Lord Monboddo and other thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment in Edinburgh From 1746 Hume served for three years as secretary to General James St Clair who was envoy to the courts of Turin and Vienna At that time Hume wrote Philosophical Essays Concerning Human Understanding later published as An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding Often called the First Enquiry it proved little more successful than the Treatise perhaps because of the publication of his short autobiography My Own Life which made friends difficult for the first Enquiry 40 By the end of this period Hume had attained his well known corpulent stature the good table of the General and the prolonged inactive life had done their work leaving him a man of tremendous bulk 25 In 1749 he went to live with his brother in the countryside although he continued to associate with the aforementioned Scottish Enlightenment figures 1750s 1760s edit Hume s religious views were often suspect and in the 1750s it was necessary for his friends to avert a trial against him on the charge of heresy specifically in an ecclesiastical court However he would not have come and could not be forced to attend if he said he was not a member of the Established Church 41 Hume failed to gain the chair of philosophy at the University of Glasgow due to his religious views By this time he had published the Philosophical Essays which were decidedly anti religious This represented a turning point in his career and the various opportunities made available to him Even Adam Smith his personal friend who had vacated the Glasgow philosophy chair was against his appointment out of concern that public opinion would be against it 42 In 1761 all his works were banned on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum 43 Hume returned to Edinburgh in 1751 In the following year the Faculty of Advocates hired him to be their Librarian a job in which he would receive little to no pay but which nonetheless gave him the command of a large library i 14 11 This resource enabled him to continue historical research for The History of England Hume s volume of Political Discourses written in 1749 and published by Kincaid amp Donaldson in 1752 44 was the only work he considered successful on first publication 14 10 In 1753 Hume moved from his house on Riddles Court on the Lawnmarket to a house on the Canongate at the other end of the Royal Mile Here he lived in a tenement known as Jack s Land immediately west of the still surviving Shoemakers Land 45 Eventually with the publication of his six volume The History of England between 1754 and 1762 Hume achieved the fame that he coveted 46 The volumes traced events from the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution of 1688 and was a bestseller in its day Hume was also a longtime friend of bookseller Andrew Millar who sold Hume s History after acquiring the rights from Scottish bookseller Gavin Hamilton 47 although the relationship was sometimes complicated Letters between them illuminate both men s interest in the success of the History In 1762 Hume moved from Jack s Land on the Canongate to James Court on the Lawnmarket He sold the house to James Boswell in 1766 48 Later life editFrom 1763 to 1765 Hume was invited to attend Lord Hertford in Paris where he became secretary to the British embassy 49 Hume was well received in Paris and while there he met with Isaac de Pinto 50 In 1765 Hume served as British Charge d affaires writing despatches to the British Secretary of State 51 He wrote of his Paris life I really wish often for the plain roughness of The Poker Club of Edinburgh to correct and qualify so much lusciousness 52 In 1766 upon returning to Britain Hume encouraged his patron Lord Hertford to invest in a number of slave plantations acquired by George Colebrooke and others in the Windward Islands 53 In June 1766 Hume facilitated the purchase of the slave plantation by writing to Victor Therese Charpentier marquis d Ennery the French governor of Martinique on behalf of his friend John Stewart a wine merchant whom he had lent 400 earlier in the same year According to Dr Felix Waldmann a former Hume Fellow at the University of Edinburgh Hume s puckish scepticism about the existence of religious miracles played a significant part in defining the critical outlook which underpins the practice of modern science Waldmann has also made the disputed claim that Hume s views served to reinforce the institution of racialised slavery in the later 18th century 54 55 56 In 1766 Hume left Paris to accompany Jean Jacques Rousseau to England Once there he and Rousseau fell out 57 leaving Hume sufficiently worried about the damage to his reputation from the quarrel with Rousseau So much so that Hume would author an account of the dispute titling it A concise and genuine account of the dispute between Mr Hume and Mr Rousseau 58 In 1767 Hume was appointed Under Secretary of State for the Northern Department Here he wrote that he was given all the secrets of the Kingdom In 1769 he returned to James Court in Edinburgh where he would live from 1771 until his death in 1776 Hume s nephew and namesake David Hume of Ninewells 1757 1838 was a co founder of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1783 He was a Professor of Scots Law at Edinburgh University and rose to be Principal Clerk of Session in the Scottish High Court and Baron of the Exchequer He is buried with his uncle in Old Calton Cemetery 59 Autobiography edit In the last year of his life Hume wrote an extremely brief autobiographical essay titled My Own Life 14 summing up his entire life in fewer than 5 pages 60 it contains many interesting judgments that have been of enduring interest to subsequent readers of Hume 61 62 Donald Seibert 1984 a scholar of 18th century literature judged it a remarkable autobiography even though it may lack the usual attractions of that genre Anyone hankering for startling revelations or amusing anecdotes had better look elsewhere 61 Despite condemning vanity as a dangerous passion 63 in his autobiography Hume confesses his belief that the love of literary fame had served as his ruling passion in life and claims that this desire never soured my temper notwithstanding my frequent disappointments One such disappointment Hume discusses in this account is in the initial literary reception of the Treatise which he claims to have overcome by means of the success of the Essays the work was favourably received and soon made me entirely forget my former disappointment Hume in his own retrospective judgment argues that his philosophical debut s apparent failure had proceeded more from the manner than the matter He thus suggests that I had been guilty of a very usual indiscretion in going to the press too early Hume also provides an unambiguous self assessment of the relative value of his works that my Enquiry concerning the Principles of Morals which in my own opinion who ought not to judge on that subject is of all my writings historical philosophical or literary incomparably the best He also wrote of his social relations My company was not unacceptable to the young and careless as well as to the studious and literary noting of his complex relation to religion as well as to the state that though I wantonly exposed myself to the rage of both civil and religious factions they seemed to be disarmed in my behalf of their wonted fury He goes on to profess of his character My friends never had occasion to vindicate any one circumstance of my character and conduct Hume concludes the essay with a frank admission 14 I cannot say there is no vanity in making this funeral oration of myself but I hope it is not a misplaced one and this is a matter of fact which is easily cleared and ascertained Death edit nbsp David Hume s mausoleum by Robert Adam in the Old Calton Burial Ground EdinburghDiarist and biographer James Boswell saw Hume a few weeks before his death from a form of abdominal cancer Hume told him that he sincerely believed it a most unreasonable fancy that there might be life after death 64 65 Hume asked that his body be interred in a simple Roman tomb requesting in his will that it be inscribed only with his name and the year of his birth and death leaving it to Posterity to add the Rest 66 David Hume died at the southwest corner of St Andrew s Square in Edinburgh s New Town at what is now 21 Saint David Street 67 A popular story consistent with some historical evidence and with the help of coincidence suggests that the street was named after Hume 68 His tomb stands as he wished it on the southwestern slope of Calton Hill in the Old Calton Cemetery Adam Smith later recounted Hume s amusing speculation that he might ask Charon Hades ferryman to allow him a few more years of life in order to see the downfall of some of the prevailing systems of superstition The ferryman replied You loitering rogue that will not happen these many hundred years Get into the boat this instant 69 Writings editA Treatise of Human Nature begins with the introduction Tis evident that all the sciences have a relation more or less to human nature Even Mathematics Natural Philosophy and Natural Religion are in some measure dependent on the science of Man 70 The science of man as Hume explains is the only solid foundation for the other sciences and that the method for this science requires both experience and observation as the foundations of a logical argument 70 7 In regards to this philosophical historian Frederick Copleston 1999 suggests that it was Hume s aim to apply to the science of man the method of experimental philosophy the term that was current at the time to imply natural philosophy and that Hume s plan is to extend to philosophy in general the methodological limitations of Newtonian physics 71 Until recently Hume was seen as a forerunner of logical positivism a form of anti metaphysical empiricism According to the logical positivists in summary of their verification principle unless a statement could be verified by experience or else was true or false by definition i e either tautological or contradictory then it was meaningless Hume on this view was a protopositivist who in his philosophical writings attempted to demonstrate the ways in which ordinary propositions about objects causal relations the self and so on are semantically equivalent to propositions about one s experiences 72 Many commentators have since rejected this understanding of Humean empiricism stressing an epistemological rather than a semantic reading of his project ii According to this opposing view Hume s empiricism consisted in the idea that it is our knowledge and not our ability to conceive that is restricted to what can be experienced Hume thought that we can form beliefs about that which extends beyond any possible experience through the operation of faculties such as custom and the imagination but he was sceptical about claims to knowledge on this basis Impressions and ideas edit A central doctrine of Hume s philosophy stated in the very first lines of the Treatise of Human Nature is that the mind consists of perceptions or the mental objects which are present to it and which divide into two categories All the perceptions of the human mind resolve themselves into two distinct kinds which I shall call impressions and ideas Hume believed that it would not be very necessary to employ many words in explaining this distinction which commentators have generally taken to mean the distinction between feeling and thinking 73 Controversially Hume in some sense may regard the distinction as a matter of degree as he takes impressions to be distinguished from ideas on the basis of their force liveliness and vivacity what Henry E Allison 2008 calls the FLV criterion 74 Ideas are therefore faint impressions For example experiencing the painful sensation of touching a hot pan s handle is more forceful than simply thinking about touching a hot pan According to Hume impressions are meant to be the original form of all our ideas From this Don Garrett 2002 has coined the term copy principle 73 referring to Hume s doctrine that all ideas are ultimately copied from some original impression whether it be a passion or sensation from which they derive 74 Simple and complex edit After establishing the forcefulness of impressions and ideas these two categories are further broken down into simple and complex simple perceptions or impressions and ideas are such as admit of no distinction nor separation whereas the complex are the contrary to these and may be distinguished into parts 70 When looking at an apple a person experiences a variety of colour sensations what Hume notes as a complex impression Similarly a person experiences a variety of taste sensations tactile sensations and smell sensations when biting into an apple with the overall sensation again a complex impression Thinking about an apple allows a person to form complex ideas which are made of similar parts as the complex impressions they were developed from but which are also less forceful Hume believes that complex perceptions can be broken down into smaller and smaller parts until perceptions are reached that have no parts of their own and these perceptions are thus referred to as simple Principles of association edit Regardless of how boundless it may seem a person s imagination is confined to the mind s ability to recombine the information it has already acquired from the body s sensory experience the ideas that have been derived from impressions In addition as our imagination takes our most basic ideas and leads us to form new ones it is directed by three principles of association namely resemblance contiguity and cause and effect 75 The principle of resemblance refers to the tendency of ideas to become associated if the objects they represent resemble one another For example someone looking at an illustration of a flower can conceive an idea of the physical flower because the idea of the illustrated object is associated with the physical object s idea The principle of contiguity describes the tendency of ideas to become associated if the objects they represent are near to each other in time or space such as when the thought of a crayon in a box leads one to think of the crayon contiguous to it The principle of cause and effect refers to the tendency of ideas to become associated if the objects they represent are causally related which explains how remembering a broken window can make someone think of a ball that had caused the window to shatter Hume elaborates more on the last principle explaining that when somebody observes that one object or event consistently produces the same object or event that results in an expectation that a particular event a cause will be followed by another event an effect previously and constantly associated with it 76 Hume calls this principle custom or habit saying that custom renders our experience useful to us and makes us expect for the future a similar train of events with those which have appeared in the past 28 However even though custom can serve as a guide in life it still only represents an expectation In other words 77 Experience cannot establish a necessary connection between cause and effect because we can imagine without contradiction a case where the cause does not produce its usual effect the reason why we mistakenly infer that there is something in the cause that necessarily produces its effect is because our past experiences have habituated us to think in this way Continuing this idea Hume argues that only in the pure realm of ideas logic and mathematics not contingent on the direct sense awareness of reality can causation safely be applied all other sciences are reduced to probability 78 28 He uses this scepticism to reject metaphysics and many theological views on the basis that they are not grounded in fact and observations and are therefore beyond the reach of human understanding Induction and causation edit The cornerstone of Hume s epistemology is the problem of induction This may be the area of Hume s thought where his scepticism about human powers of reason is most pronounced 79 The problem revolves around the plausibility of inductive reasoning that is reasoning from the observed behaviour of objects to their behaviour when unobserved As Hume wrote induction concerns how things behave when they go beyond the present testimony of the senses or the records of our memory 80 Hume argues that we tend to believe that things behave in a regular manner meaning that patterns in the behaviour of objects seem to persist into the future and throughout the unobserved present 81 Hume s argument is that we cannot rationally justify the claim that nature will continue to be uniform as justification comes in only two varieties demonstrative reasoning and probable reasoning iii and both of these are inadequate With regard to demonstrative reasoning Hume argues that the uniformity principle cannot be demonstrated as it is consistent and conceivable that nature might stop being regular 82 Turning to probable reasoning Hume argues that we cannot hold that nature will continue to be uniform because it has been in the past As this is using the very sort of reasoning induction that is under question it would be circular reasoning 83 Thus no form of justification will rationally warrant our inductive inferences Hume s solution to this problem is to argue that rather than reason natural instinct explains the human practice of making inductive inferences He asserts that Nature by an absolute and uncontroulable sic necessity has determin d us to judge as well as to breathe and feel In 1985 and in agreement with Hume John D Kenyon writes 84 Reason might manage to raise a doubt about the truth of a conclusion of natural inductive inference just for a moment but the sheer agreeableness of animal faith will protect us from excessive caution and sterile suspension of belief Others such as Charles Sanders Peirce have demurred from Hume s solution 85 while some such as Kant and Karl Popper have thought that Hume s analysis has posed a most fundamental challenge to all human knowledge claims 86 The notion of causation is closely linked to the problem of induction According to Hume we reason inductively by associating constantly conjoined events It is the mental act of association that is the basis of our concept of causation At least three interpretations of Hume s theory of causation are represented in the literature 87 the logical positivist the sceptical realist and the quasi realist Hume acknowledged that there are events constantly unfolding and humanity cannot guarantee that these events are caused by prior events or are independent instances He opposed the widely accepted theory of causation that all events have a specific course or reason Therefore Hume crafted his own theory of causation formed through his empiricist and sceptic beliefs He split causation into two realms All the objects of human reason or enquiry may naturally be divided into two kinds to wit Relations of Ideas and Matters of Fact 28 Relations of Ideas are a priori and represent universal bonds between ideas that mark the cornerstones of human thought Matters of Fact are dependent on the observer and experience They are often not universally held to be true among multiple persons Hume was an Empiricist meaning he believed causes and effects are discoverable not by reason but by experience 28 He goes on to say that even with the perspective of the past humanity cannot dictate future events because thoughts of the past are limited compared to the possibilities for the future Hume s separation between Matters of Fact and Relations of Ideas is often referred to as Hume s fork 1 Hume explains his theory of causation and causal inference by division into three different parts In these three branches he explains his ideas and compares and contrasts his views to his predecessors These branches are the Critical Phase the Constructive Phase and Belief 88 In the Critical Phase Hume denies his predecessors theories of causation Next he uses the Constructive Phase to resolve any doubts the reader may have had while observing the Critical Phase Habit or Custom mends the gaps in reasoning that occur without the human mind even realising it Associating ideas has become second nature to the human mind It makes us expect for the future a similar train of events with those which have appeared in the past 28 However Hume says that this association cannot be trusted because the span of the human mind to comprehend the past is not necessarily applicable to the wide and distant future This leads him to the third branch of causal inference Belief Belief is what drives the human mind to hold that expectancy of the future is based on past experience Throughout his explanation of causal inference Hume is arguing that the future is not certain to be repetition of the past and that the only way to justify induction is through uniformity The logical positivist interpretation is that Hume analyses causal propositions such as A causes B in terms of regularities in perception A causes B is equivalent to Whenever A type events happen B type ones follow where whenever refers to all possible perceptions 89 In his Treatise of Human Nature Hume wrote 90 Power and necessity are qualities of perceptions not of objects felt by the soul and not perceiv d externally in bodies This view is rejected by sceptical realists who argue that Hume thought that causation amounts to more than just the regular succession of events ii Hume said that when two events are causally conjoined a necessary connection underpins the conjunction 91 Shall we rest contented with these two relations of contiguity and succession as affording a complete idea of causation By no means there is a necessary connexion to be taken into consideration Angela Coventry writes that for Hume there is nothing in any particular instance of cause and effect involving external objects which suggests the idea of power or necessary connection and we are ignorant of the powers that operate between objects 92 However while denying the possibility of knowing the powers between objects Hume accepted the causal principle writing I never asserted so absurd a proposition as that something could arise without a cause 93 It has been argued that while Hume did not think that causation is reducible to pure regularity he was not a fully fledged realist either Simon Blackburn calls this a quasi realist reading 94 saying that Someone talking of cause is voicing a distinct mental set he is by no means in the same state as someone merely describing regular sequences 95 In Hume s words nothing is more usual than to apply to external bodies every internal sensation which they occasion 96 Self edit Empiricist philosophers such as Hume and Berkeley favoured the bundle theory of personal identity 97 In this theory the mind itself far from being an independent power is simply a bundle of perceptions without unity or cohesive quality 98 The self is nothing but a bundle of experiences linked by the relations of causation and resemblance or more accurately the empirically warranted idea of the self is just the idea of such a bundle According to Hume 70 For my part when I enter most intimately into what I call myself I always stumble on some particular perception or other of heat or cold light or shade love or hatred pain or pleasure I never can catch myself at any time without a perception and never can observe any thing but the perception When my perceptions are removed for any time as by sound sleep so long I am insensible of myself and may truly be said not to exist A Treatise of Human Nature Book I iv section 6 This view is supported by for example positivist interpreters who have seen Hume as suggesting that terms such as self person or mind refer to collections of sense contents 99 A modern day version of the bundle theory of the mind has been advanced by Derek Parfit in his Reasons and Persons 100 However some philosophers have criticised Hume s bundle theory interpretation of personal identity They argue that distinct selves can have perceptions that stand in relation to similarity and causality Thus perceptions must already come parcelled into distinct bundles before they can be associated according to the relations of similarity and causality In other words the mind must already possess a unity that cannot be generated or constituted by these relations alone Since the bundle theory interpretation portrays Hume as answering an ontological question philosophers like Galen Strawson see Hume as not very concerned with such questions and have queried whether this view is really Hume s Instead Strawson suggests that Hume might have been answering an epistemological question about the causal origin of our concept of the self 101 In the Appendix to the Treatise Hume declares himself dissatisfied with his earlier account of personal identity in Book 1 Corliss Swain notes that Commentators agree that if Hume did find some new problem when he reviewed the section on personal identity he wasn t forthcoming about its nature in the Appendix 102 One interpretation of Hume s view of the self argued for by philosopher and psychologist James Giles is that Hume is not arguing for a bundle theory which is a form of reductionism but rather for an eliminative view of the self Rather than reducing the self to a bundle of perceptions Hume rejects the idea of the self altogether On this interpretation Hume is proposing a no self theory and thus has much in common with Buddhist thought see anatta 103 Psychologist Alison Gopnik has argued that Hume was in a position to learn about Buddhist thought during his time in France in the 1730s 104 105 Practical reason edit Practical reason relates to whether standards or principles exist that are also authoritative for all rational beings dictating people s intentions and actions Hume is mainly considered an anti rationalist denying the possibility for practical reason although other philosophers such as Christine Korsgaard Jean Hampton and Elijah Millgram claim that Hume is not so much of an anti rationalist as he is just a sceptic of practical reason 106 Hume denied the existence of practical reason as a principle because he claimed reason does not have any effect on morality since morality is capable of producing effects in people that reason alone cannot create As Hume explains in A Treatise of Human Nature 1740 70 457 Morals excite passions and produce or prevent actions Reason of itself is utterly impotent in this particular The rules of morality therefore are not conclusions of our reason Since practical reason is supposed to regulate our actions in theory Hume denied practical reason on the grounds that reason cannot directly oppose passions As Hume puts it Reason is and ought only to be the slave of the passions and can never pretend to any other office than to serve and obey them Reason is less significant than any passion because reason has no original influence while A passion is an original existence or if you will modification of existence 70 415 Practical reason is also concerned with the value of actions rather than the truth of propositions 107 so Hume believed that reason s shortcoming of affecting morality proved that practical reason could not be authoritative for all rational beings since morality was essential for dictating people s intentions and actions Ethics edit See also is ought problem Hume s writings on ethics began in the 1740 Treatise and were refined in his An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals 1751 He understood feeling rather than knowing as that which governs ethical actions stating that moral decisions are grounded in moral sentiment 108 Arguing that reason cannot be behind morality he wrote 109 Morals excite passions and produce or prevent actions Reason itself is utterly impotent in this particular The rules of morality therefore are not conclusions of our reason Hume s moral sentimentalism was shared by his close friend Adam Smith 110 failed verification and the two were mutually influenced by the moral reflections of their older contemporary Francis Hutcheson 111 Peter Singer claims that Hume s argument that morals cannot have a rational basis alone would have been enough to earn him a place in the history of ethics 112 Hume also put forward the is ought problem later known as Hume s Law 112 denying the possibility of logically deriving what ought to be from what is According to the Treatise 1740 in every system of morality that Hume has read the author begins by stating facts about the world as it is but always ends up suddenly referring to what ought to be the case Hume demands that a reason should be given for inferring what ought to be the case from what is the case This is because it seems altogether inconceivable how this new relation can be a deduction from others 113 Hume s theory of ethics has been influential in modern day meta ethical theory 114 helping to inspire emotivism 115 and ethical expressivism and non cognitivism 116 failed verification as well as Allan Gibbard s general theory of moral judgment and judgments of rationality 117 Aesthetics edit Hume s ideas about aesthetics and the theory of art are spread throughout his works but are particularly connected with his ethical writings and also the essays Of the Standard of Taste and Of Tragedy 1757 His views are rooted in the work of Joseph Addison and Francis Hutcheson 118 In the Treatise 1740 he touches on the connection between beauty and deformity and vice and virtue 119 His later writings on the subject continue to draw parallels of beauty and deformity in art with conduct and character 120 In Standard of Taste Hume argues that no rules can be drawn up about what is a tasteful object However a reliable critic of taste can be recognised as objective sensible and unprejudiced and as having extensive experience 121 Of Tragedy addresses the question of why humans enjoy tragic drama Hume was concerned with the way spectators find pleasure in the sorrow and anxiety depicted in a tragedy He argued that this was because the spectator is aware that he is witnessing a dramatic performance There is pleasure in realising that the terrible events that are being shown are actually fiction 122 Furthermore Hume laid down rules for educating people in taste and correct conduct and his writings in this area have been very influential on English and Anglo Saxon aesthetics 123 Free will determinism and responsibility edit nbsp Statue of Hume sculpted by Alexander Stoddart on the Royal Mile in EdinburghHume along with Thomas Hobbes is cited as a classical compatibilist about the notions of freedom and determinism 124 125 Compatibilism seeks to reconcile human freedom with the mechanist view that human beings are part of a deterministic universe which is completely governed by physical laws Hume on this point was influenced greatly by the scientific revolution particularly by Sir Isaac Newton 126 Hume argued that the dispute between freedom and determinism continued over 2000 years due to ambiguous terminology He wrote From this circumstance alone that a controversy has been long kept on foot we may presume that there is some ambiguity in the expression and that different disputants use different meanings for the same terms 127 128 Hume defines the concept of necessity as the uniformity observable in the operations of nature where similar objects are constantly conjoined together 129 and liberty as a power of acting or not acting according to the determinations of the will 130 He then argues that according to these definitions not only are the two compatible but liberty requires necessity For if our actions were not necessitated in the above sense they would have so little in connexion with motives inclinations and circumstances that one does not follow with a certain degree of uniformity from the other But if our actions are not thus connected to the will then our actions can never be free they would be matters of chance which is universally allowed to have no existence 131 Australian philosopher John Passmore writes that confusion has arisen because necessity has been taken to mean necessary connexion Once this has been abandoned Hume argues that liberty and necessity will be found not to be in conflict one with another 128 Moreover Hume goes on to argue that in order to be held morally responsible it is required that our behaviour be caused or necessitated for as he wrote 132 Actions are by their very nature temporary and perishing and where they proceed not from some cause in the character and disposition of the person who performed them they can neither redound to his honour if good nor infamy if evil Hume describes the link between causality and our capacity to rationally make a decision from this an inference of the mind Human beings assess a situation based upon certain predetermined events and from that form a choice Hume believes that this choice is made spontaneously Hume calls this form of decision making the liberty of spontaneity 133 Education writer Richard Wright considers that Hume s position rejects a famous moral puzzle attributed to French philosopher Jean Buridan The Buridan s ass puzzle describes a donkey that is hungry This donkey has separate bales of hay on both sides which are of equal distances from him The problem concerns which bale the donkey chooses Buridan was said to believe that the donkey would die because he has no autonomy The donkey is incapable of forming a rational decision as there is no motive to choose one bale of hay over the other However human beings are different because a human who is placed in a position where he is forced to choose one loaf of bread over another will make a decision to take one in lieu of the other For Buridan humans have the capacity of autonomy and he recognises the choice that is ultimately made will be based on chance as both loaves of bread are exactly the same However Wright says that Hume completely rejects this notion arguing that a human will spontaneously act in such a situation because he is faced with impending death if he fails to do so Such a decision is not made on the basis of chance but rather on necessity and spontaneity given the prior predetermined events leading up to the predicament 126 Hume s argument is supported by modern day compatibilists such as R E Hobart a pseudonym of philosopher Dickinson S Miller 134 However P F Strawson argued that the issue of whether we hold one another morally responsible does not ultimately depend on the truth or falsity of a metaphysical thesis such as determinism This is because our so holding one another is a non rational human sentiment that is not predicated on such theses 135 136 Religion edit Philosopher Paul Russell 2005 contends that Hume wrote on almost every central question in the philosophy of religion and that these writings are among the most important and influential contributions on this topic 137 Touching on the philosophy psychology history and anthropology of religious thought Hume s 1757 dissertation The Natural History of Religion argues that the monotheistic religions of Judaism Christianity and Islam all derive from earlier polytheistic religions He went on to suggest that all religious belief traces in the end to dread of the unknown 138 Hume had also written on religious subjects in the first Enquiry as well as later in the Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion 137 Religious views edit Although he wrote a great deal about religion Hume s personal views have been the subject of much debate iv Some modern critics have described Hume s religious views as agnostic or have described him as a Pyrrhonian skeptic 139 Contemporaries considered him to be an atheist or at least un Christian enough so that the Church of Scotland seriously considered bringing charges of infidelity against him 140 Evidence of his un Christian beliefs can especially be found in his writings on miracles in which he attempts to separate historical method from the narrative accounts of miracles 139 Nevertheless modern scholars have tended to dismiss the claims of Hume s contemporaries describing him as an atheist as coming from religiously intolerant people who did not understand Hume s philosophy 141 The fact that contemporaries suspected him of atheism is exemplified by a story Hume liked to tell 142 The best theologian he ever met he used to say was the old Edinburgh fishwife who having recognized him as Hume the atheist refused to pull him out of the bog into which he had fallen until he declared he was a Christian and repeated the Lord s prayer However in works such as Of Superstition and Enthusiasm Hume specifically seems to support the standard religious views of his time and place 143 This still meant that he could be very critical of the Catholic Church dismissing it with the standard Protestant accusations of superstition and idolatry 144 143 70 as well as dismissing as idolatry what his compatriots saw as uncivilised beliefs 145 He also considered extreme Protestant sects the members of which he called enthusiasts to be corrupters of religion 146 By contrast in The Natural History of Religion Hume presents arguments suggesting that polytheism had much to commend it over monotheism 147 Additionally when mentioning religion as a factor in his History of England Hume uses it to show the deleterious effect it has on human progress In his Treatise of Human Nature Hume wrote Generally speaking the errors in religions are dangerous those in philosophy only ridiculous 139 Lou Reich 1998 argues that Hume was a religious naturalist and rejects interpretations of Hume as an atheist 148 Paul Russell 2008 writes that Hume was plainly sceptical about religious belief although perhaps not to the extent of complete atheism He suggests that Hume s position is best characterised by the term irreligion 149 while philosopher David O Connor 2013 argues that Hume s final position was weakly deistic For O Connor Hume s position is deeply ironic This is because while inclining towards a weak form of deism he seriously doubts that we can ever find a sufficiently favourable balance of evidence to justify accepting any religious position He adds that Hume did not believe in the God of standard theism but he did not rule out all concepts of deity and that ambiguity suited his purposes and this creates difficulty in definitively pinning down his final position on religion 150 Design argument editOne of the traditional topics of natural theology is that of the existence of God and one of the a posteriori arguments for this is the argument from design or the teleological argument The argument is that the existence of God can be proved by the design that is obvious in the complexity of the world which Encyclopaedia Britannica states is the most popular because it is 151 unreliable source the most accessible of the theistic arguments which identifies evidences of design in nature inferring from them a divine designer The fact that the universe as a whole is a coherent and efficiently functioning system likewise in this view indicates a divine intelligence behind it In An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding Hume wrote that the design argument seems to depend upon our experience and its proponents always suppose the universe an effect quite singular and unparalleled to be the proof of a Deity a cause no less singular and unparalleled 152 Philosopher Louise E Loeb 2010 notes that Hume is saying that only experience and observation can be our guide to making inferences about the conjunction between events However according to Hume 153 We observe neither God nor other universes and hence no conjunction involving them There is no observed conjunction to ground an inference either to extended objects or to God as unobserved causes Hume also criticised the argument in his Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion 1779 In this he suggested that even if the world is a more or less smoothly functioning system this may only be a result of the chance permutations of particles falling into a temporary or permanent self sustaining order which thus has the appearance of design 151 unreliable source A century later the idea of order without design was rendered more plausible by Charles Darwin s discovery that the adaptations of the forms of life result from the natural selection of inherited characteristics 151 unreliable source For philosopher James D Madden it is Hume rivaled only by Darwin who has done the most to undermine in principle our confidence in arguments from design among all figures in the Western intellectual tradition 154 Finally Hume discussed a version of the anthropic principle which is the idea that theories of the universe are constrained by the need to allow for man s existence in it as an observer Hume has his sceptical mouthpiece Philo suggest that there may have been many worlds produced by an incompetent designer whom he called a stupid mechanic In his Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion Hume wrote 155 Many worlds might have been botched and bungled throughout an eternity ere this system was struck out much labour lost many fruitless trials made and a slow but continued improvement carried on during infinite ages in the art of world making Problem of miracles edit Main article Of Miracles In his discussion of miracles Hume argues that we should not believe miracles have occurred and that they do not therefore provide us with any reason to think God exists 156 In An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding Section 10 Hume defines a miracle as a transgression of a law of nature by a particular volition of the Deity or by the interposition of some invisible agent Hume says we believe an event that has frequently occurred is likely to occur again but we also take into account those instances where the event did not occur 157 A wise man considers which side is supported by the greater number of experiments A hundred instances or experiments on one side and fifty on another afford a doubtful expectation of any event though a hundred uniform experiments with only one that is contradictory reasonably beget a pretty strong degree of assurance In all cases we must balance the opposite experiments and deduct the smaller number from the greater in order to know the exact force of the superior evidence Hume discusses the testimony of those who report miracles He wrote that testimony might be doubted even from some great authority in case the facts themselves are not credible T he evidence resulting from the testimony admits of a diminution greater or less in proportion as the fact is more or less unusual 158 Although Hume leaves open the possibility for miracles to occur and be reported he offers various arguments against this ever having happened in history 159 He points out that people often lie and they have good reasons to lie about miracles occurring either because they believe they are doing so for the benefit of their religion or because of the fame that results Furthermore people by nature enjoy relating miracles they have heard without caring for their veracity and thus miracles are easily transmitted even when false Also Hume notes that miracles seem to occur mostly in ignorant and barbarous nations 160 and times and the reason they do not occur in the civilised societies is such societies are not awed by what they know to be natural events Hume recognizes that over a long period time various coincidences can provide the appearance of intention Finally the miracles of each religion argue against all other religions and their miracles and so even if a proportion of all reported miracles across the world fit Hume s requirement for belief the miracles of each religion make the other less likely 161 Hume was extremely pleased with his argument against miracles in his Enquiry He states I flatter myself that I have discovered an argument of a like nature which if just will with the wise and learned be an everlasting check to all kinds of superstitious delusion and consequently will be useful as long as the world endures 162 Thus Hume s argument against miracles had a more abstract basis founded upon the scrutiny not just primarily of miracles but of all forms of belief systems It is a commonsense notion of veracity based upon epistemological evidence and founded on a principle of rationality proportionality and reasonability 161 The criterion for assessing Hume s belief system is based on the balance of probability whether something is more likely than not to have occurred Since the weight of empirical experience contradicts the notion for the existence of miracles such accounts should be treated with scepticism Further the myriad of accounts of miracles contradict one another as some people who receive miracles will aim to prove the authority of Jesus whereas others will aim to prove the authority of Muhammad or some other religious prophet or deity These various differing accounts weaken the overall evidential power of miracles 163 failed verification Despite all this Hume observes that belief in miracles is popular and that the gazing populace receive greedily without examination whatever soothes superstition and promotes wonder 164 Critics have argued that Hume s position assumes the character of miracles and natural laws prior to any specific examination of miracle claims thus it amounts to a subtle form of begging the question To assume that testimony is a homogeneous reference group seems unwise to compare private miracles with public miracles unintellectual observers with intellectual observers and those who have little to gain and much to lose with those with much to gain and little to lose is not convincing to many Indeed many have argued that miracles not only do not contradict the laws of nature but require the laws of nature to be intelligible as miraculous and thus subverting the law of nature For example William Adams remarks that there must be an ordinary course of nature before anything can be extraordinary There must be a stream before anything can be interrupted 165 They have also noted that it requires an appeal to inductive inference as none have observed every part of nature nor examined every possible miracle claim for instance those in the future This in Hume s philosophy was especially problematic 166 Little appreciated is the voluminous literature either foreshadowing Hume in the likes of Thomas Sherlock 167 or directly responding to and engaging with Hume from William Paley 168 William Adams 169 John Douglas 170 John Leland 171 and George Campbell 172 among others Regarding the latter it is rumoured that having read Campbell s Dissertation Hume remarked that the Scotch theologue had beaten him 173 Hume s main argument concerning miracles is that miracles by definition are singular events that differ from the established laws of nature Such natural laws are codified as a result of past experiences Therefore a miracle is a violation of all prior experience and thus incapable on this basis of reasonable belief However the probability that something has occurred in contradiction of all past experience should always be judged to be less than the probability that either one s senses have deceived one or the person recounting the miraculous occurrence is lying or mistaken Hume would say all of which he had past experience of For Hume this refusal to grant credence does not guarantee correctness He offers the example of an Indian Prince who having grown up in a hot country refuses to believe that water has frozen By Hume s lights this refusal is not wrong and the prince reasoned justly it is presumably only when he has had extensive experience of the freezing of water that he has warrant to believe that the event could occur 158 So for Hume either the miraculous event will become a recurrent event or else it will never be rational to believe it occurred The connection to religious belief is left unexplained throughout except for the close of his discussion where Hume notes the reliance of Christianity upon testimony of miraculous occurrences He makes an ironic remark that anyone who is moved by faith to assent to revealed testimony is conscious of a continued miracle in his own person which subverts all principles of his understanding and gives him a determination to believe what is most contrary to custom and experience 174 175 Hume writes that All the testimony whichever was really given for any miracle or ever will be given is a subject of derision 158 As a historian of England edit nbsp David Hume by Allan Ramsay 1766 Where men are the most sure and arrogant they are commonly the most mistaken and have there given reins to passion without that proper deliberation and suspense which can alone secure them from the grossest absurdities An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals 9 13 Conclusion Pt 1 1751 From 1754 to 1762 Hume published The History of England a six volume work that extends according to its subtitle From the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution in 1688 Inspired by Voltaire s sense of the breadth of history Hume widened the focus of the field away from merely kings parliaments and armies to literature and science as well He argued that the quest for liberty was the highest standard for judging the past and concluded that after considerable fluctuation England at the time of his writing had achieved the most entire system of liberty that was ever known amongst mankind 176 It must be regarded as an event of cultural importance In its own day moreover it was an innovation soaring high above its very few predecessors 177 Hume s History of England made him famous as a historian before he was ever considered a serious philosopher In this work Hume uses history to tell the story of the rise of England and what led to its greatness and the disastrous effects that religion has had on its progress For Hume the history of England s rise may give a template for others who would also like to rise to its current greatness 139 Hume s The History of England was profoundly impacted by his Scottish background The science of sociology which is rooted in Scottish thinking of the eighteenth century had never before been applied to British philosophical history Because of his Scottish background Hume was able to bring an outsider s lens to English history that the insulated English whigs lacked 29 122 Hume s coverage of the political upheavals of the 17th century relied in large part on the Earl of Clarendon s History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England 1646 69 Generally Hume took a moderate royalist position and considered revolution unnecessary to achieve necessary reform Hume was considered a Tory historian and emphasised religious differences more than constitutional issues Laird Okie explains that Hume preached the virtues of political moderation but it was moderation with an anti Whig pro royalist coloring 178 For Hume shared the Tory belief that the Stuarts were no more high handed than their Tudor predecessors 179 Even though Hume wrote with an anti Whig animus it is paradoxically correct to regard the History as an establishment work one which implicitly endorsed the ruling oligarchy 180 Historians have debated whether Hume posited a universal unchanging human nature or allowed for evolution and development 181 The debate between Tory and the Whig historians can be seen in the initial reception to Hume s History of England The whig dominated world of 1754 overwhelmingly disapproved of Hume s take on English history In later editions of the book Hume worked to soften or expunge many villainous whig strokes which had crept into it 29 121 Hume did not consider himself a pure Tory Before 1745 he was more akin to an independent whig In 1748 he described himself as a whig though a very skeptical one This description of himself as in between whiggism and toryism helps one understand that his History of England should be read as his attempt to work out his own philosophy of history 29 122 Robert Roth argues that Hume s histories display his biases against Presbyterians and Puritans Roth says his anti Whig pro monarchy position diminished the influence of his work and that his emphasis on politics and religion led to a neglect of social and economic history 182 Hume was an early cultural historian of science His short biographies of leading scientists explored the process of scientific change He developed new ways of seeing scientists in the context of their times by looking at how they interacted with society and each other He covers over forty scientists with special attention paid to Francis Bacon Robert Boyle and Isaac Newton Hume particularly praised William Harvey writing about his treatise of the circulation of the blood Harvey is entitled to the glory of having made by reasoning alone without any mixture of accident a capital discovery in one of the most important branches of science 183 The History became a best seller and made Hume a wealthy man who no longer had to take up salaried work for others 184 It was influential for nearly a century despite competition from imitations by Smollett 1757 Goldsmith 1771 and others By 1894 there were at least 50 editions as well as abridgements for students and illustrated pocket editions probably produced specifically for women 185 Political theory edit Many of Hume s political ideas such as limited government private property when there is scarcity and constitutionalism are first principles of liberalism 186 Thomas Jefferson banned the History from University of Virginia feeling that it had spread universal toryism over the land 187 By comparison Samuel Johnson thought Hume to be a Tory by chance for he has no principle If he is anything he is a Hobbist 188 A major concern of Hume s political philosophy is the importance of the rule of law He also stresses throughout his political essays the importance of moderation in politics public spirit and regard to the community 189 Throughout the period of the American Revolution Hume had varying views For instance in 1768 he encouraged total revolt on the part of the Americans In 1775 he became certain that a revolution would take place and said that he believed in the American principle and wished the British government would let them be Hume s influence on some of the Founders can be seen in Benjamin Franklin s suggestion at the Philadelphia Convention of 1787 that no high office in any branch of government should receive a salary which is a suggestion Hume had made in his emendation of James Harrington s Oceana 190 The legacy of religious civil war in 18th century Scotland combined with the relatively recent memory of the 1715 and 1745 Jacobite risings had fostered in Hume a distaste for enthusiasm and factionalism These appeared to him to threaten the fragile and nascent political and social stability of a country that was deeply politically and religiously divided 191 failed verification Hume thought that society is best governed by a general and impartial system of laws he is less concerned about the form of government that administers these laws so long as it does so fairly However he also clarified that a republic must produce laws while monarchy when absolute contains even something repugnant to law 192 Hume expressed suspicion of attempts to reform society in ways that departed from long established custom and he counselled peoples not to resist their governments except in cases of the most egregious tyranny 193 However he resisted aligning himself with either of Britain s two political parties the Whigs and the Tories 194 My views of things are more conformable to Whig principles my representations of persons to Tory prejudices The scholar Jerry Z Muller argues that Hume s political thoughts have characteristics that later became typical for American and British conservatism which contain more positive views of capitalism than conservatism does elsewhere 195 Canadian philosopher Neil McArthur writes that Hume believed that we should try to balance our demands for liberty with the need for strong authority without sacrificing either McArthur characterises Hume as a precautionary conservative 196 124 whose actions would have been determined by prudential concerns about the consequences of change which often demand we ignore our own principles about what is ideal or even legitimate 196 failed verification Hume supported the liberty of the press and was sympathetic to democracy when suitably constrained American historian Douglass Adair has argued that Hume was a major inspiration for James Madison s writings and the essay Federalist No 10 in particular 197 Hume offered his view on the best type of society in an essay titled Idea of a Perfect Commonwealth which lays out what he thought was the best form of government He hoped that in some future age an opportunity might be afforded of reducing the theory to practice either by a dissolution of some old government or by the combination of men to form a new one in some distant part of the world He defended a strict separation of powers decentralisation extending the franchise to anyone who held property of value and limiting the power of the clergy The system of the Swiss militia was proposed as the best form of protection Elections were to take place on an annual basis and representatives were to be unpaid 198 Political philosophers Leo Strauss and Joseph Cropsey writing of Hume s thoughts about the wise statesman note that he will bear a reverence to what carries the marks of age Also if he wishes to improve a constitution his innovations will take account of the ancient fabric in order not to disturb society 199 In the political analysis of philosopher George Holland Sabine the scepticism of Hume extended to the doctrine of government by consent He notes that allegiance is a habit enforced by education and consequently as much a part of human nature as any other motive 200 In the 1770s Hume was critical of British policies toward the American colonies and advocated for American independence He wrote in 1771 that our union with America in the nature of things cannot long subsist 57 Contributions to economic thought edit nbsp Statues of David Hume and Adam Smith by David Watson Stevenson on the Scottish National Portrait Gallery in EdinburghHume expressed his economic views in his Political Discourses which were incorporated in Essays and Treatises as Part II of Essays Moral and Political 7 To what extent he was influenced by Adam Smith is difficult to assess however both of them had similar principles supported from historical events 7 At the same time Hume did not demonstrate concrete system of economic theory which could be observed in Smith s Wealth of Nations However he introduced several new ideas around which the classical economics of the 18th century was built 7 Through his discussions on politics Hume developed many ideas that are prevalent in the field of economics This includes ideas on private property inflation and foreign trade 201 Referring to his essay Of the Balance of Trade economist Paul Krugman 2012 has remarked that David Hume created what I consider the first true economic model 202 In contrast to Locke Hume believes that private property is not a natural right Hume argues it is justified because resources are limited Private property would be an unjustified idle ceremonial if all goods were unlimited and available freely 203 Hume also believed in an unequal distribution of property because perfect equality would destroy the ideas of thrift and industry Perfect equality would thus lead to impoverishment 204 205 David Hume anticipated modern monetarism First Hume contributed to the theory of quantity and of interest rate Hume has been credited with being the first to prove that on an abstract level there is no quantifiable amount of nominal money that a country needs to thrive He understood that there was a difference between nominal and real money Second Hume has a theory of causation which fits in with the Chicago school black box approach According to Hume cause and effect are related only through correlation Hume shared the belief with modern monetarists that changes in the supply of money can affect consumption and investment Lastly Hume was a vocal advocate of a stable private sector though also having some non monetarist aspects to his economic philosophy Having a stated preference for rising prices for instance Hume considered government debt to be a sort of substitute for actual money referring to such debt as a kind of paper credit He also believed in heavy taxation believing that it increases effort Hume s economic approach evidently resembles his other philosophies in that he does not choose one side indefinitely but sees gray in the situation 206 Legacy edit nbsp Hume s statue on Edinburgh s Royal Mile sculpted by Alexander StoddartDue to Hume s vast influence on contemporary philosophy a large number of approaches in contemporary philosophy and cognitive science are today called Humean 12 The writings of Thomas Reid a Scottish philosopher and contemporary of Hume were often critical of Hume s scepticism Reid formulated his common sense philosophy in part as a reaction against Hume s views 207 Hume influenced and was influenced by the Christian philosopher Joseph Butler Hume was impressed by Butler s way of thinking about religion and Butler may well have been influenced by Hume s writings 208 137 Attention to Hume s philosophical works grew after the German philosopher Immanuel Kant in his Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics 1783 credited Hume with awakening him from his dogmatic slumber 209 According to Arthur Schopenhauer there is more to be learned from each page of David Hume than from the collected philosophical works of Hegel Herbart and Schleiermacher taken together 210 A J Ayer while introducing his classic exposition of logical positivism in 1936 claimed 211 The views which are put forward in this treatise derive from doctrines which are themselves the logical outcome of the empiricism of Berkeley and David Hume Albert Einstein in 1915 wrote that he was inspired by Hume s positivism when formulating his theory of special relativity 212 213 Hume s problem of induction was also of fundamental importance to the philosophy of Karl Popper In his autobiography Unended Quest he wrote Knowledge is objective and it is hypothetical or conjectural This way of looking at the problem made it possible for me to reformulate Hume s problem of induction This insight resulted in Popper s major work The Logic of Scientific Discovery 214 In his Conjectures and Refutations he wrote 215 I approached the problem of induction through Hume Hume I felt was perfectly right in pointing out that induction cannot be logically justified Hume s rationalism in religious subjects influenced via German Scottish theologian Johann Joachim Spalding the German neology school and rational theology and contributed to the transformation of German theology in the Age of Enlightenment 216 217 Hume pioneered a comparative history of religion 218 219 tried to explain various rites and traditions as being based on deception 220 221 and challenged various aspects of rational and natural theology such as the argument from design 218 Danish theologian and philosopher Soren Kierkegaard adopted Hume s suggestion that the role of reason is not to make us wise but to reveal our ignorance though taking it as a reason for the necessity of religious faith or fideism The fact that Christianity is contrary to reason is the necessary precondition for true faith 222 Political theorist Isaiah Berlin who has also pointed out the similarities between the arguments of Hume and Kierkegaard against rational theology 222 has written about Hume s influence on what Berlin calls the counter Enlightenment and on German anti rationalism 223 Berlin has also once said of Hume that no man has influenced the history of philosophy to a deeper or more disturbing degree 224 In 2003 philosopher Jerry Fodor described Hume s Treatise as the founding document of cognitive science 225 226 Hume engaged with contemporary intellectuals including Jean Jacques Rousseau James Boswell and Adam Smith who acknowledged Hume s influence on his economics and political philosophy Morris and Brown 2019 write that Hume is generally regarded as one of the most important philosophers to write in English 1 In September 2020 the David Hume Tower a University of Edinburgh building was renamed to 40 George Square this was following a campaign led by students of the university to rename it in objection to Hume s writings related to race 227 228 229 230 Works edit1734 A Kind of History of My Life MSS 23159 National Library of Scotland 32 76 A letter to an unnamed physician asking for advice about the Disease of the Learned that then afflicted him Here he reports that at the age of eighteen there seem d to be open d up to me a new Scene of Thought that made him throw up every other Pleasure or Business and turned him to scholarship 32 1739 1740 A Treatise of Human Nature Being an Attempt to introduce the experimental Method of Reasoning into Moral Subjects 70 Hume intended to see whether the Treatise of Human Nature met with success and if so to complete it with books devoted to Politics and Criticism However as Hume explained It fell dead born from the press without reaching such distinction as even to excite a murmur among the zealots 14 352 and so his further project was not completed 1740 An Abstract of a Book lately Published Entitled A Treatise of Human Nature etc Anonymously published but almost certainly written by Hume v in an attempt to popularise his Treatise This work is of considerable philosophical interest as it spells out what Hume considered The Chief Argument of the Treatise in a way that seems to anticipate the structure of the Enquiry concerning Human Understanding 1741 Essays Moral Political and Literary 2st ed 231 A collection of pieces written and published over many years though most were collected together in 1753 54 Many of the essays are on politics and economics other topics include aesthetic judgement love marriage and polygamy and the demographics of ancient Greece and Rome The Essays show some influence from Addison s Tatler and The Spectator which Hume read avidly in his youth 1745 A Letter from a Gentleman to His Friend in Edinburgh Containing Some Observations on a Specimen of the Principles concerning Religion and Morality said to be maintain d in a Book lately publish d intituled A Treatise of Human Nature etc Contains a letter written by Hume to defend himself against charges of atheism and scepticism while applying for a chair at Edinburgh University 1742 Of Essay Writing 232 1748 An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding Contains reworking of the main points of the Treatise Book 1 with the addition of material on free will adapted from Book 2 miracles the Design Argument and mitigated scepticism Of Miracles section X of the Enquiry was often published separately 1751 An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals A reworking of material on morality from Book 3 of the Treatise but with a significantly different emphasis It was thought by Hume to be the best of his writings 233 1752 Political Discourses part II of Essays Moral Political and Literary within the larger Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects vol 1 Included in Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects 1753 56 reprinted 1758 77 1752 1758 Political Discourses Discours politiques 1757 Four Dissertations includes 4 essays The Natural History of Religion Of the Passions Of Tragedy Of the Standard of Taste 1754 1762 The History of England sometimes referred to as The History of Great Britain 234 More a category of books than a single work Hume s history spanned from the invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution of 1688 and went through over 100 editions Many considered it the standard history of England in its day 1760 Sister Peg Hume claimed to have authored an anonymous political pamphlet satirizing the failure of the British Parliament to create a Scottish militia in 1760 Although the authorship of the work is disputed Hume wrote Dr Alexander Carlyle in early 1761 claiming authorship The readership of the time attributed the work to Adam Ferguson a friend and associate of Hume s who has been sometimes called the founder of modern sociology Some contemporary scholars concur in the judgment that Ferguson not Hume was the author of this work 1776 My Own Life 14 Penned in April shortly before his death this autobiography was intended for inclusion in a new edition of Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects It was first published by Adam Smith who claimed that by doing so he had incurred ten times more abuse than the very violent attack I had made upon the whole commercial system of Great Britain 235 1777 Essays on Suicide and the Immortality of the Soul 236 1779 Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion Published posthumously by his nephew David Hume the Younger Being a discussion among three fictional characters concerning the nature of God and is an important portrayal of the argument from design Despite some controversy most scholars agree that the view of Philo the most sceptical of the three comes closest to Hume s own See also edit nbsp Conservatism portal nbsp Philosophy portal nbsp Libertarianism portalAge of Enlightenment George Anderson Human science Hume Studies Hume s principle Humeanism Mencius Scientific scepticism The Missing Shade of BlueReferences editNotes edit The Faculty of Advocates chose me their Librarian an office from which I received little or no emolument but which gave me the command of a large library Hume 1776 11 a b For example see Craig 1987 Ch 2 Strawson 2014 and Wright 1983 These are Hume s terms In modern parlance demonstration may be termed deductive reasoning while probability may be termed inductive reasoning Millican Peter 1996 Hume Induction and Probability Leeds University of Leeds Archived from the original on 20 October 2017 Retrieved 6 June 2014 For example see Russell 2008 O Connor 2013 and Norton 1993 For this see Keynes J M and P Sraffa 1965 Introduction In An Abstract of A Treatise of Human Nature by D Hume 1740 Connecticut Archon Books Citations edit a b c d Morris William Edward and Charlotte R Brown 2019 2001 David Hume Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Stanford Metaphysics Research Lab Retrieved 18 May 2020 Fumerton Richard 21 February 2000 Foundationalist Theories of Epistemic Justification Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 19 August 2018 Demeter Tamas 2016 David Hume and the culture of Scottish Newtonianism methodology and ideology in Enlightenment inquiry Brill ISBN 978 90 04 32731 3 OCLC 960722703 David Bostock Philosophy of Mathematics An Introduction Wiley Blackwell 2009 p 43 All of Descartes Locke Berkeley and Hume supposed that mathematics is a theory of our ideas but none of them offered any argument for this conceptualist claim and apparently took it to be uncontroversial The Problem of Perception Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Paraphrasing David Hume 1739 see also Locke 1690 Berkeley 1710 Russell 1912 nothing is ever directly present to the mind in perception except perceptual appearances David Marian 3 October 2018 The Correspondence Theory of Truth In Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University via Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy a b c d Cranston Maurice and Thomas Edmund Jessop 2020 1999 David Hume Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 18 May 2020 Harris M H 1966 David Hume Library Quarterly 36 April 88 98 a b Atherton 1999 p Berlin Isaiah 2013 The Roots of Romanticism 2nd ed Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691156200 Hume 1739 p 415 a b c Garrett Don 2015 Hume reprint ed London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 28334 2 Hume on Free Will stanford edu Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University 2016 a b c d e f g h i j Hume David 1778 1776 My Own Life In The History of England from the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution in 1688 1 London Archived from the original on 13 August 2015 Also available via Rutgers University Retrieved 18 May 2020 Morris Ted 2018 2013 David Hume Biography The Hume Society Retrieved 18 May 2020 a b Hume 1778 p 3 Mossner 1958 pp 30 33 quoted in Wright 2009 p 10 Harris 2004 p 35 Hume 1993 p 346 Johnson 1995 pp 8 9 a b Mossner 1950 p 193 Hume David 1932 1734 Letter to a Dr George Cheyne pp 13 15 in The Letters of David Hume 1 edited by J Y T Greig Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 186158 1 doi 10 1093 actrade 9780199693245 book 1 Mossner 1980 p 204 Wright John P 2003 Dr George Cheyne Chevalier Ramsay and Hume s Letter to a Physician Hume Studies 29 1 125 141 via Project MUSE doi 10 1353 hms 2011 0100 a b Mossner 1980 p 204 Huxley Thomas Henry 2011 1879 Hume English Men of Letters 39 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 03477 7 pp 7 8 Hume David 2007 1748 An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding edited by P Millican Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 152635 0 OCLC 314220887 pp lxiii lxiv a b c d e f Hume David 1990 1748 An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding New York Anchor Doubleday a b c d Trevor Roper Hugh 2010 History and the Enlightenment Yale University Press Hume David 1777 Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects 2 London Archived from the original on 13 August 2015 Retrieved 18 May 2020 Mossner 1950 p 195 a b c d Hume David 1993 1734 A Kind of History of My Life In The Cambridge Companion to Hume edited by D F Norton Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 38710 1 Hume 1740 Norton 1993 p 31 Redman 1997 p 175 footnote 19 Nobbs Douglas 1965 The Political Ideas of William Cleghorn Hume s Academic Rival Journal of the History of Ideas 26 4 575 586 doi 10 2307 2708501 JSTOR 2708501 p 575 Lorkowski C M David Hume Religion Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Mossner 1950 p 172 Fieser 2005 p xxii Buckle Stephen 1999 Hume s biography and Hume s philosophy Australasian Journal of Philosophy 77 1 25 doi 10 1080 00048409912348781 Emerson 2009 p 244 Rivers Isabel 2000 Reason Grace and Sentiment A Study of the Language of Religion and Ethics in England 1660 1780 2 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 511 48447 6 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511484476 p 255 BFE Censored publications Search result search beaconforfreedom org Archived from the original on 2 December 2021 Retrieved 2 December 2021 Sher Richard B 2008 The Enlightenment and the Book Scottish Authors and Their Publishers in Eighteenth Century Britain Ireland and America Chicago Studies in Ethnomusicology Series Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 75254 9 p 312 grant s Old and New Edinburgh vol 3 p 9 Emerson 2009 p 98 The manuscripts Letter from David Hume to Andrew Millar 12 April 1755 millar project ed ac uk Archived from the original on 15 January 2016 Retrieved 1 June 2016 Grants Old and New Edinburgh vol 1 p 97 Klibansky Raymond and Ernest C Mossner eds 1954 New Letters of David Hume Oxford Oxford University Press pp 77 79 Popkin Richard H 1970 Hume and Isaac de Pinto Texas Studies in Literature and Language 12 3 417 430 JSTOR 40754109 Fieser James 2005 2003 A Bibliography of Hume s Writings and Early Responses Archived 3 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine Bristol Thoemmes Press via Academia edu p 59 Mossner 1980 p 285 Waldmann Felix ed 2014 Further Letters of David Hume Archived 27 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine Edinburgh Edinburgh Bibliographical Society pp 65 69 via Academia edu Waldmann Felix 17 July 2020 David Hume was a brilliant philosopher but also a racist involved in slavery The Scotsman Retrieved 14 September 2020 Ashton David Hutton Peter 28 December 2023 Edinburgh University rush to condemn David Hume shames it The Herald Glasgow Retrieved 25 January 2024 Ashton David Hutton Peter David Hume An Apologia Scottish Affairs 32 3 Retrieved 25 January 2024 a b Scurr Ruth 4 November 2017 An Enlightened Friendship Wall Street Journal Becker T and P A de Hondt trans 1766 A concise and genuine account of the dispute between Mr Hume and Mr Rousseau with the letters that passed between them during their controversy London Available in full text Retrieved 19 May 2020 Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 2002 PDF The Royal Society of Edinburgh 2006 ISBN 978 0 902198 84 5 Archived from the original PDF on 24 January 2013 Retrieved 14 November 2016 Stanley Liz 2006 The Writing of David Hume s My Own Life The Persona of the Philosopher and the Philosopher Manque Auto Biography 14 1 19 doi 10 1191 0967550706ab051oa a b Siebert Donald T 1984 David Hume s Last Words The Importance of My Own Life Studies in Scottish Literature 19 1 132 147 Retrieved 18 May 2020 Buckle Stephen 1999 Hume s biography and Hume s philosophy Australasian Journal of Philosophy 77 1 25 doi 10 1080 00048409912348781 Galvagni Enrico 1 June 2020 Hume on Pride Vanity and Society Journal of Scottish Philosophy 18 2 157 173 doi 10 3366 jsp 2020 0265 ISSN 1479 6651 S2CID 225800023 Weis Charles M and Frederick A Pottle eds 1970 Boswell in Extremes 1776 1778 New York McGraw Hill 1970 New York McGraw Hill OL 5217786M LCCN 75 102461 Bassett 2012 p 272 this meeting was dramatised in semi fictional form for the BBC by Michael Ignatieff as Dialogue in the Dark Mossner 1980 p 591 Burton 1846 pp 384 385 Burton 1846 p 436 footnote 1 Smith Adam 1789 1776 Letter from Adam Smith LL D to William Strathan Esq pp xix xxiv in The History of England from the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution in 1688 1 London Thomas Cadell and Longman p xxi a b c d e f g Hume David 1739 A Treatise of Human Nature 1 London John Noon Retrieved 19 May 2020 Copleston Frederick 1999 1960 A History of Philosophy 6 Kent Burns amp Oats ISBN 978 0 86012 299 9 Lay summary via Google Books pp 405 406 Hume David 2007 1748 An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding edited by P Millican Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 152635 0 OCLC 314220887 pp xii xv a b Garrett Don 2002 Cognition and Commitment in Hume s Philosophy Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 515959 2 a b Allison Henry E 2008 Custom and Reason in Hume A Kantian Reading of the First Book of the Treatise Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 953288 9 Fieser James 2011 David Hume 1711 1776 Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 19 May 2020 a b Norton David Fate 1999 1993 Hume David Pp 398 403 in Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy 2nd ed edited by R Audi Cambridge Cambridge University Press Retrieved 18 May 2020 via Gale Drefcinski Shane 1998 A Very Brief Summary of David Hume Dr Shane Drefcinski US University of Wisconsin Platteville Archived 9 May 2017 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 19 May 2020 Hume David 2010 1778 An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding In Masterplots 4th ed pp 1 3 Kenyon amp Craig 1985 p Hume 1777 p 26 Atherton 1999 pp 202 203 Hume 1777 p 111 Hume 1777 p 115 Kenyon amp Craig 1985 p 254 Harris 2004 p 42 Popkin 2014 Read amp Richman 2002 pp 13 14 69 Davidhume org Texts An Enquiry concerning Human Understanding 1748 1777 Web 19 March 2017 For this account of Hume s views on causation cf Ayer 1946 pp 40 42 Hume 1739 p 167 Hume 1739 p 78 original emphasis Coventry 2006 pp 91 92 Hume 2011 p 187 Blackburn 1990 p Quoted by Dauer 2010 p 97 Hume 1777 p 78 fn 17 Dicker 2002 p 15 Maurer 2013 Ayer 1946 pp 135 136 Parfit 1984 p Strawson 2011 p Swain 2008 p 142 Giles 1993 p Gopnik 2009 p Garfield 2015 pp 45 107 Mason Michelle September 2005 Hume and Humeans on Practical Reason PDF 31 2 Hume Studies Archived from the original PDF on 17 June 2016 Retrieved 27 May 2016 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Wallace Jay 2014 Practical Reason Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 29 April 2016 Cranston 2014 p 4 Hume 1739 p 458 Hume 2013 p 548 Taylor 1965 p a b Singer 2015 Hume 1739 p 470 Edwards 2002 p 44 Humber 2008 p 136 Brown 2005 pp 97 100 Angier 2012 p 114 Gracyk 2011 ch 1 Hume 1739 Sect VII and Sect VIII pp 295 304 Costelloe 2013 p viii Harris 2013 p 401 Schmidt 2010 pp 325 326 Scruton 2014 p 18 McKenna amp Coates 2015 Ch 3 Russell 1995 a b Wright 2010 p Hume 1777 p 81 a b Passmore 2013 p 73 Hume 1777 p 82 Hume 1777 p 95 Hume 1777 p 96 Hume 1777 p 98 original emphasis Mounce amp Mounce 2002 p 66 See e g Hobart 1934 p and Carroll amp Markosian 2010 p 54 note 11 Strawson 2008 p Prasad 1995 p 348 a b c Russel Paul 2010 2005 Hume on Religion The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2008 ed Retrieved 19 May 2020 O Connor 2013 pp 7 8 a b c d Mullen Shirley 2003 David Hume and a Christian Perspective on History Fides et Historia XXXV 49 60 Mossner 1980 p 206 Russell Paul Kraal Anders 2021 Hume on Religion in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2021 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 31 May 2022 Scharfstein 1998 p 454 footnote a b Hume David 1777 1741 Of Superstition and Enthusiasm Essay X in Essays Moral Political and Literary 1742 1754 Retrieved 19 May 2020 Archived Also available Full text and Liberty Fund edition Hume 1777 p 51 Hume 1757 p 34 Hume 1741 pp 73 76 Hume 1757 p 63 Reich Lou 1998 Hume s Religious Naturalism University Press of America pp 1 3 41 42 ISBN 978 0 7618 0982 1 Russell Paul 2008 The Riddle of Hume s Treatise Skepticism Naturalism and Irreligion Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 975152 5 O Connor 2013 pp 11 19 a b c RE Hume 1777 p 148 Loeb 2010 p 118 Madden 2005 p 150 emphasis removed Hume 1779 p 167 Bailey amp O Brien 2006 p 101 Hume 1777 pp 110 111 a b c Hume 1777 p 113 Hume 1777 pp 116 131 Part II of Section X Hume 1777 p 119 a b Bailey amp O Brien 2006 pp 105 108 Hume 1777 p 110 Ahluwalia 2008 pp 104 106 Hume 1777 p 126 An essay in answer to Mr Hume s Essay on miracles London White 1767 Retrieved 16 March 2017 Levine 1989 p 3 Sherlock Thomas 1809 The Trial of the Witnesses of the Resurrection of Jesus Internet Archive John Eliot Retrieved 16 March 2017 witnesses Thomas SHerlock Paley William Nairne Charles Murray 1858 Paley s Evidences of Christianity With Notes and Additions William Paley Charles Murray Nairne Retrieved 16 March 2017 via Google Books An essay in answer to Mr Hume s Essay on miracles Adams William 1706 1789 London White 1767 Retrieved 16 March 2017 Douglas John 1832 The criterion or Miracles examined with a view to expose the pretensions John Douglas John Douglas bp of Salisbury Retrieved 16 March 2017 via Google Books Leland John Brown William Laurence 1837 A view of the principal deistical writers that have appeared in England in John Leland William Laurence Brown Retrieved 16 March 2017 via Google Books Campbell George 1823 A Dissertation on Miracles Containing an Examination of the Principles George Campbell Retrieved 16 March 2017 via Google Books Huitt Kyle 25 December 2016 Campbell George Library of Historical Apologetics Retrieved 16 May 2020 Hume 1777 p 131 emphasis removed MacKie 1982 p 29 Hume s History of England vol 6 p 531 cited in Kenyon 1984 p 42 Jessop 2015 Okie 1985 p 16 Okie 1985 p 25 Okie 1985 p 27 Wertz 1975 p Roth 1991 p Wertz 1993 p Morris amp Brown 2011 Chapter Life and Works Phillipson 2012 p 131 David Hume s Classical Liberalism Thomas W Merrill So quoted in Livingston 1965 Hume 1888 note 13 to letter LXXXIV Forbes 1985 p 150 Werner John 1972 David Hume and America Journal of the History of Ideas 33 3 439 456 doi 10 2307 2709045 JSTOR 2709045 Wiley 2012 p 211 Hume 1741 p 119 Hume 1739 p 550 So quoted in Mossner 1980 p 311 original emphasis Jerry Z Muller ed 1997 Conservatism An Anthology of Social and Political Thought from David Hume to the Present Princeton U P pp 25 26 ISBN 978 0 691 03711 0 a b McArthur Neil 2007 David Hume s Political Theory Law Commerce and the Constitution of Government Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 9335 6 Adair 1957 p Hume 1987 Strauss Leo Cropsey Joseph 2012 Strauss L and Cropsey J History of Political Philosophy University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 92471 7 Retrieved 16 March 2017 Sabine George H 1973 1937 A History of Political Theory US Dryden Press p 603 Robbins Lionel A History of Economic Thought The LSE Lectures edited by Medema and Samuels Ch 11 and 12 Krugman Paul 20 November 2012 How We Know The Earth Is Old The New York Times Retrieved 21 November 2012 Richards H Understanding the Global Economy Peace Education Books 2004 p 322 Hume David 1751 An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals Stewart J B 2014 Opinion and Reform in Hume s Political Philosophy Princeton Princeton University Press pp 163 164 Mayer Thomas 1980 David Hume and Monetarism The Quarterly Journal of Economics 95 1 89 101 doi 10 2307 1885350 JSTOR 1885350 Nichols Ryan and Gideon Yaffe 2014 2000 Thomas Reid Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Stanford Metaphysics Research Lab Savage R 2012 Philosophy and Religion in Enlightenment Britain New Case Studies Oxford Oxford University Press p 170 Kant Immanuel 1783 Introduction In Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics Schopenhauer Arthur The World as Will and Representation 2 Ch 46 p 582 Ayer A J 2001 Language Truth and Logic Penguin Books Limited ISBN 978 0 14 191180 9 Retrieved 14 August 2019 Einstein Albert 1998 1915 Letter to Moritz Schlick The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein 8A edited by R Schulmann A J Fox and J Illy Princeton NJ Princeton University Press p 220 Schwarzschild Bertram trans 2004 Albert Einstein to Moritz Schlick Physics Today 58 12 17 doi 10 1063 1 2169428 Popper Karl 1976 Unended Quest An Intellectual Autobiography ISBN 978 0 415 28590 2 pp 95 96 Popper Karl 2014 1963 Conjectures and Refutations The Growth of Scientific Knowledge London Routledge p 55 Hodge Charles 1873 Systematic Theology New York Scribner Armstrong and Co p 43 iarchive systematictheol00hodggoog page n59 Schroter Marianne 2011 Transformationen des Theologiebegriffes in der Aufklarung pp 182 202 in Evangelische Theologie an Staatlichen Universitaten Konzepte und Konstellationen Evangelischer Theologie und Religionsforschung edited by S Alkier and H Heimbrock Gottingen a b Joas Hans 14 November 2013 Religionsgeschichte als Religionskritik David Hume und die Folgen lecture Beyond Myth and Enlightenment Vienna Institut fur die Wissenschaften vom Menschen Title translation Religious Studies as Criticism of Religion David Hume and the Consequences Penelhum T 2012 1983 Penelhum T 2012 Skepticism Parity and Religion The Case of Hume Springer ISBN 978 94 009 7083 0 pp 120 145 in God and Skepticism A Study in Skepticism and Fideism Dordrecht D Reidel Publishing de Friedrich Wilhelm Graf Von David Hume liess er sich nicht die Butter vom Brot nehmen Ein Ausweis der aufgeklarten protestantischen Theologenelite ist wieder zuganglich Johann Joachim Spalding in vorzuglicher Edition Spalding never let Hume get the better of him about a new edition of a mainstake of the enlighted protestant theological elite review of Graf of a new edition of Spaldings works in Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung Feuilleton print version Nr 249 Page 39 27 October 2003 Whelan FG Hume and Machiavelli Political Realism and Liberal Thought Lexington Books 2004 p 163 a b Miles T 2009 Hume Kierkegaard and Hume on reason faith and the ethics of philosophy In Kierkegaard and the Renaissance and Modern Traditions Philosophy edited by J B Stewart London Ashgate Publishing p 27 Berlin Isaiah 2013 Hume and the Sources of German Anti Rationalism pp 204 235 in Against the Current Essays in the History of Ideas 2nd ed Princeton Princeton University Press Berlin Isaiah 11 May 2014 Impressions of David Hume podcast episode Philosophy Now Radio Show 34 hosted by G Bartley Jessop T E 1955 David Hume Biography Biography Online 175 4460 697 698 Bibcode 1955Natur 175 697J doi 10 1038 175697a0 S2CID 4187913 Fodor Jerry A Hume Variations New York Oxford University Press p 135 Campaign to rename Edinburgh University building named after David Hume wins Students Union support Edinburgh News Retrieved 18 September 2020 Hume disciples back name change for university tower The Times Retrieved 18 September 2020 Millie Lord 28 September 2020 Renaming DHT was a necessary antiracist step but only the first of many The Student Archived from the original on 13 January 2021 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Immerwahr John 1992 Hume s Revised Racism Journal of the History of Ideas 53 3 481 486 doi 10 2307 2709889 ISSN 0022 5037 JSTOR 2709889 In 1753 Hume revised his essay Of National Characters by adding the following footnote I am apt to suspect the negroes and in general all other species of men for there are four or five different kinds to be naturally inferior to the whites There never was a civilized nation of any other complexion than white nor even any individual eminent either in action or speculation No ingenious manufactures amongst them no arts no science Hume David 1741 Essays Moral Political and Literary 1 Retrieved 19 May 2020 Archived See also Liberty Fund edition Hume David 1993 1742 Of Essay Writing translated by F Grandjean Mauvezin France Trans Europ Repress Sampson George 1943 Samson G The Concise Cambridge History of English Literature CUP Archive 1941 p 548 Retrieved 16 March 2017 Smith Adam 1789 The History of England from the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution in 1688 1 London Thomas Cadell and Longman Berry Christopher J Paganelli Maria Pia Smith Craig 2013 The Oxford Handbook of Adam Smith Oxford University Press p 466 ISBN 978 0 19 960506 4 Retrieved 16 March 2017 ESSAYS ON SUICIDE AND THE IMMORTALITY OF THE SOUL http public library uk ebooks 47 13 pdf Bibliography edit Adair Douglass 1957 That Politics May Be Reduced to a Science David Hume James Madison and the Tenth Federalist Huntington Library Quarterly 20 4 343 360 doi 10 2307 3816276 JSTOR 3816276 Ahluwalia Libby 2008 Understanding Philosophy of Religion illustrated ed Folens ISBN 978 1 85008 264 4 Anderson R F 1966 Hume s First Principles University of Nebraska Press Lincoln Angier Tom ed 2012 Ethics The Key Thinkers Vol 12 A amp C Black ISBN 978 1 4411 4939 8 Atherton Margaret ed 1999 The Empiricists Critical Essays on Locke Berkeley and Hume Critical essays on the classics Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8476 8913 2 Ayer Alfred Jules 1946 Language Truth and Logic reprint ed Penguin Books Bailey Alan O Brien Dan 2006 Hume s Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding A Reader s Guide Continuum reader s guides A amp C Black ISBN 978 0 8264 8509 0 Bassett Kate 2012 In Two Minds a Biography of Jonathan Miller Oberon Books ISBN 978 1 84943 738 7 permanent dead link Great Thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment BBC History 14 September 2014 Blackburn Simon Autumn 1990 Hume and Thick Connexions Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 50 Supplement 237 250 doi 10 2307 2108041 JSTOR 2108041 Blackburn Simon October 1995 Practical Tortoise Raising Mind New Series ed 104 416 695 711 doi 10 1093 mind 104 416 695 JSTOR 2254478 Bongie L L 1998 David Hume Prophet of the Counter Revolution Liberty Fund Indianapolis Boswell James 1970 Weis Charles McC Pottle Frederick A eds Boswell in Extremes 1776 1778 Yale editions of the private papers of James Boswell Yale University Broackes Justin 1995 Hume David in Ted Honderich ed The Oxford Companion to Philosophy New York Oxford University Press Brown Stuart ed 2005 Dictionary of Twentieth Century British Philosophers A amp C Black ISBN 978 1 84371 096 7 Buckle Stephen March 1999 Hume s biography and Hume s philosophy Australasian Journal of Philosophy 77 1 1 25 doi 10 1080 00048409912348781 Burton John Hill 1846 Life and Correspondence of David Hume Vol 2 William Tait Carroll John W Markosian Ned 2010 An Introduction to Metaphysics Cambridge Introductions to Philosophy Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82629 7 Copleston Frederick 1999 A History of Philosophy Vol 6 A amp C Black ISBN 978 0 86012 299 9 Costelloe Timothy M 2013 Aesthetics and Morals in the Philosophy of David Hume Routledge Studies in Eighteenth Century Philosophy Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 19787 2 Coventry Angela M 2006 Hume s Theory of Causation Continuum Studies in British Philosophy A amp C Black ISBN 978 1 84714 222 1 Craig Edward 1987 The Mind of God and the Works of Man Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 824933 7 Cranston Maurice 16 November 2014 David Hume Scottish philosopher Morals and historical writing Encyclopaedia Britannica Daiches D Jones P Jones J eds The Scottish Enlightenment 1730 1790 A Hotbed of Genius The University of Edinburgh 1986 In paperback The Saltire Society 1996 ISBN 978 0 85411 069 8 Dauer Francis Watanabe 2010 Hume on the Relation of Cause and Effect In Radcliffe Elizabeth S ed A Companion to Hume John Wiley amp Sons pp 89 105 doi 10 1002 9780470696583 ch5 ISBN 978 1 4443 3786 0 Dees Richard H 2010 Chapter 21 One of the Finest and Most Subtle Inventions Hume on Government In Radcliffe Elizabeth S ed A Companion to Hume John Wiley amp Sons pp 388 405 doi 10 1002 9780470696583 ch6 ISBN 978 1 4443 3786 0 Dennett Daniel C 2009 Chapter 3 Atheism and Evolution In Zagzebski Linda Miller Timothy D eds Readings in Philosophy of Religion Ancient to Contemporary John Wiley amp Sons pp 614 635 ISBN 978 1 4051 8092 4 Dicker Georges 2002 Hume s Epistemology and Metaphysics An Introduction Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 71425 4 Edwards Peter 2002 The future of ethics In Leaman Oliver ed The Future of Philosophy Towards the Twenty First Century Routledge pp 41 61 ISBN 978 1 134 82457 1 Einstein A 1915 Letter to Moritz Schlick Schwarzschild B trans amp ed in The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein vol 8A R Schulmann A J Fox J Illy eds Princeton University Press Princeton NJ 1998 p 220 Emerson Roger L 2009 Essays on David Hume Medical Men and the Scottish Enlightenment Industry Knowledge and Humanity Science Technology and Culture 1700 1945 Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 0 7546 9338 3 Fieser James 2003 A Bibliography of Hume s Writings and Early Responses Thoemmes Press Fieser James 2005 Early Responses to Hume s Life And Reputation Vol 9 10 A amp C Black ISBN 978 1 84371 115 5 Fisher A R J December 2011 Causal and Logical Necessity in Malebranche s Occasionalism PDF Canadian Journal of Philosophy 41 4 523 548 doi 10 1353 cjp 2011 0043 ISSN 1911 0820 S2CID 55643409 Archived from the original PDF on 5 February 2015 Flew A 1986 David Hume Philosopher of Moral Science Basil Blackwell Oxford Fodor Jerry A 2003 Hume Variations Lines of thought Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 926405 6 Fogelin R J 1993 Hume s scepticism In Norton D F ed 1993 The Cambridge Companion to Hume Cambridge University Press pp 90 116 Forbes Duncan 1985 Hume s Philosophical Politics Cambridge paperback library reprint ed CUP Archive ISBN 978 0 521 31997 3 Garfield Jay L 1995 The Fundamental Wisdom of the Middle Way Oxford University Press Garfield Jay L 2015 Engaging Buddhism Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 020433 4 Giles James April 1993 The No Self Theory Hume Buddhism and Personal Identity Philosophy East and West 43 2 175 200 doi 10 2307 1399612 JSTOR 1399612 S2CID 147497625 Gopnik Alison 2009 Could David Hume Have Known about Buddhism Charles Francois Dolu the Royal College of La Fleche and the Global Jesuit Intellectual Network Hume Studies 35 1 and 2 5 28 ISSN 0319 7336 Gracyk Ted 2011 Hume s Aesthetics In Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Graham R 2004 The Great Infidel A Life of David Hume John Donald Edinburgh Harris James A ed 2013 The Oxford Handbook of British Philosophy in the Eighteenth Century Oxford Handbooks in Philosophy Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 954902 3 Harris James A 2015 Hume An Intellectual Biography Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 83725 5 Harris Errol E 2004 Hypothesis and Perception The Roots of Scientific Method Vol 10 Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 29615 1 Harwood Sterling 1996 Moral Sensibility Theories in The Encyclopedia of Philosophy Supplement New York Macmillan Publishing Co Hobart R E 1934 Free Will as Involving Determination and Inconceivable Without It Mind 43 169 1 27 doi 10 1093 mind XLIII 169 1 JSTOR 2250169 Humber James M 2008 Hume In Arrington Robert L ed The World s Great Philosophers John Wiley amp Sons pp 126 137 ISBN 978 0 470 69295 0 Hume David 1740 An Abstract of a Book lately Published Entitled A Treatise of Human Nature amp c Wherein the Chief Argument of that Book is farther Illustrated and Explained London C Borbett Archived from the original on 17 June 2018 Retrieved 28 February 2015 Hume D 1751 An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals David Hume Essays Moral Political and Literary edited with preliminary dissertations and notes by T H Green and T H Grose 1 1 8 London Longmans Green 1907 Hume David 1777 1748 An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding London A Millar Archived from the original on 10 July 2018 Retrieved 14 March 2015 Hume David 1739 A Treatise of Human Nature London John Noon Archived from the original on 12 July 2018 Retrieved 11 March 2015 Hume David 1779 Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion Archived from the original on 24 June 2018 Retrieved 22 April 2015 Hume David 1741 Essays Moral and Political Edinburgh A Kincaid Archived from the original on 10 July 2018 Retrieved 7 April 2015 Hume David 1987 Idea of a Perfect Commonwealth In Miller Eugene F ed Essays Moral Political and Literary Indianapolis Library Fund Inc Hume David 1888 Hill George Birkbeck Norman ed Letters of David Hume to William Strahan Oxford Clarendon Press Hume David 1757 The Natural History of Religion Four Dissertations London A Millar Archived from the original on 16 April 2015 Retrieved 7 April 2015 Hume David 2013 Appendix C From Adam Smith The Theory of Moral Sentiments 1759 In Falkenstein Lorne McArthur Neil eds Essays and Treatises on Philosophical Subjects Broadview editions Broadview Press ISBN 978 1 55111 804 8 Hume David 1993 A Kind of History of My Life In Norton David Fate ed The Cambridge Companion to Hume Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 38710 1 Hume D 1752 1758 Political Discourses Bilingual English French translated by Fabien Grandjean Mauvezin France Trans Europ Repress 1993 22 cm V 260 p Bibliographic notes index Hume David 2011 Greig J Y T ed The Letters of David Hume 1727 1765 Vol 1 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 969324 5 Hume David 1778 My Own Life The History of England from the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution in 1688 Vol 1 London via Rutgers University edited by Jack Lynch pp 1 21 Archived from the original on 16 January 2018 Retrieved 25 February 2015 Hume David 1789 Letter from Adam Smith LL D to William Strathan Esq The History of England from the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution in 1688 Vol 1 London Thomas Cadell and Longman pp xix xxiv Husserl E 1970 The Crisis of European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology Carr D trans Northwestern University Press Evanston Huxley Thomas Henry 2011 Hume English Men of Letters Vol 39 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 03477 7 Jessop Thomas Edmund 5 May 2015 David Hume Scottish philosopher Significance and influence Encyclopaedia Britannica Johnson Oliver A 1995 The Mind of David Hume University of Illinois Press 8 9 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Kenyon John D Craig Edward 1985 Doubts about the Concept of Reason Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volumes 59 249 267 and 269 283 doi 10 1093 aristoteliansupp 59 1 249 JSTOR 4106756 Kenyon John Philipps 1984 The history men the historical profession in England since the Renaissance University of Pittsburgh Press p 42 ISBN 978 0 8229 5900 7 Klibansky Raymond and Mossner Ernest C eds 1954 New Letters of David Hume Oxford Oxford University Press Kolakowski L 1968 The Alienation of Reason A History of Positivist Thought Doubleday Garden City Korsgaard Christine M January 1996 Skepticism about Practical Reason The Journal of Philosophy 83 1 5 25 doi 10 2307 2026464 JSTOR 2026464 Levine Michael 1989 Hume and the Problem of Miracles A Solution Philosophical Studies Series Vol 41 Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 0 7923 0043 4 Livingston Donald 1965 Foreword David Hume Prophet of the Counter revolution Oxford University Press Loeb Louis E 2010 Chapter 6 Inductive Inference in Hume s Philosophy In Radcliffe Elizabeth S ed A Companion to Hume John Wiley amp Sons pp 106 125 doi 10 1002 9780470696583 ch6 ISBN 978 1 4443 3786 0 MacKie John Leslie 1982 The Miracle of Theism Arguments for and Against the Existence of God reprinted ed Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 824682 4 Madden James D 2005 Chapter 8 Giving the devil his due In Sennett James F Groothuis Douglas eds In Defense of Natural Theology A Post Humean Assessment InterVarsity Press pp 150 174 ISBN 978 0 8308 2767 1 Magee Bryan 2000 The Great Philosophers An Introduction to Western Philosophy Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 289322 2 Martin Orejana Marina 1991 Jorge Luis Borges and David Hume Their Epistemological Approach to the External World and the Self University of Virginia Maurer The Reverend Armand 27 May 2013 Western philosophy Basic Science of Human Nature in Hume Encyclopaedia Britannica McArthur Neil 2007 David Hume s Political Theory Law Commerce and the Constitution of Government University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 9335 6 McDowell John 1981 Non cognitivism and rule following In Holtzman Steven H Leich Christopher M eds Wittgenstein To Follow A Rule International Library of Philosophy Psychology and Scientific Method Routledge amp Kegan Paul pp 141 162 ISBN 978 0 7100 0760 5 McKenna Michael Coates Justin D 2015 Compatibilism In Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Millican Peter 1996 Hume Induction and Probability PDF University of Leeds Archived from the original PDF on 20 October 2017 Retrieved 6 June 2014 Morris William Edward Brown Charlotte R 2011 David Hume In Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Mossner Ernest Campbell 1958 Hume at La Fleche 1735 an unpublished letter Studies in English 37 30 33 Mossner Ernest Campbell 1950 Philosophy and Biography The Case of David Hume The Philosophical Review 59 2 184 201 doi 10 2307 2181501 JSTOR 2181501 Mossner Ernest Campbell 1980 The Life of David Hume Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 924336 5 Mounce Howard Mounce H O 2002 Hume s Naturalism Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 65446 8 Nobbs Douglas 1965 The Political Ideas of William Cleghorn Hume s Academic Rival Journal of the History of Ideas 26 4 575 586 doi 10 2307 2708501 JSTOR 2708501 Norton David Fate 1993 Introduction to Hume s thought In Norton David Fate ed The Cambridge Companion to Hume Cambridge University Press pp 1 32 ISBN 978 0 521 38710 1 O Connor David 2013 Routledge Philosophy GuideBook to Hume on Religion Routledge Philosophy GuideBooks Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 63409 5 Okie Laird 1985 Ideology and Partiality in David Hume s History of England PDF Hume Studies 11 1 1 32 doi 10 1353 hms 2011 0052 S2CID 170693611 Archived from the original PDF on 8 December 2014 Retrieved 8 July 2013 Parfit Derek 1984 Reasons and Persons Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 162244 1 Passmore John A 2013 Hume s Intentions Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 69786 7 Penelhum T 1993 Hume s moral philosophy In Norton D F ed 1993 The Cambridge Companion to Hume Cambridge University Press pp 117 147 Phillipson N 1989 Hume Weidenfeld amp Nicolson London Phillipson Nicholas 2012 David Hume The Philosopher As Historian New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 18166 1 Popkin Richard H 3 December 2014 Skepticism The 18th century Encyclopaedia Britannica Popkin Richard H 1993 Sources of Knowledge of Sextus Empiricus in Hume s Time Journal of the History of Ideas Vol 54 No 1 Jan 1993 pp 137 141 Popkin R amp Stroll A 1993 Philosophy Reed Educational and Professional Publishing Ltd Oxford Popper K 1960 Knowledge without authority In Miller D ed 1983 Popper Oxford Fontana pp 46 57 Prasad Rajendra 1995 Reactive Attitudes Rationality and Determinism In Sen Pranab Kumar Verma Roop Rekha eds The Philosophy of P F Strawson Allied Publishers pp 346 376 ISBN 978 81 85636 16 0 Read Rupert Richman Kenneth eds 2002 The New Hume Debate Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 55528 4 Redman Deborah A 1997 The Rise of Political Economy as a Science Methodology and the Classical Economists Massachusetts Institute of Technology ISBN 978 0 262 26425 9 Arguments for the existence of God The design or teleological argument Religiouseducation co uk Archived from the original on 14 April 2015 Retrieved 22 April 2015 Rivers Isabel 2000 Reason Grace and Sentiment Volume 2 Shaftesbury to Hume A Study of the Language of Religion and Ethics in England 1660 1780 Cambridge Studies in Eighteenth Century English Literature and Thought Vol 37 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 42500 1 Robbins Lionel 1998 A History of Economic Thought The LSE Lectures Edited by Steven G Medema and Warren J Samuels Princeton University Press Princeton NJ Robinson Dave amp Groves Judy 2003 Introducing Political Philosophy Icon Books ISBN 978 1 84046 450 4 Roth Robert J 1991 David Hume on Religion in England Thought Fordham University Quarterly 66 260 51 64 doi 10 5840 thought199166142 Russell B 1946 A History of Western Philosophy London Allen and Unwin Russell Paul 1995 Freedom and Moral Sentiment Hume s Way of Naturalizing Responsibility Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 509501 2 Russell Paul 2014 Hume on Religion In Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Russell Paul Hume on Free Will The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2016 Edition Edward N Zalta ed online Russell Paul 2008 The Riddle of Hume s Treatise Skepticism Naturalism and Irreligion Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 975152 5 Scharfstein Ben Ami 1998 A Comparative History of World Philosophy From the Upanishads to Kant EBSCO eBook Collection SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 3683 7 Schmidt Claudia M 2010 David Hume Reason in History Penn State Press ISBN 978 0 271 04697 6 Scruton Roger 14 December 2014 Aesthetics Major concerns of 18th century aesthetics Encyclopaedia Britannica Sgarbi M 2012 Hume s Source of the Impression Idea Distinction Anales del Seminario de Historia de la Filosofia 2 561 576 Sher Richard B 2008 The Enlightenment and the Book Scottish Authors and Their Publishers in Eighteenth Century Britain Ireland and America Chicago Studies in Ethnomusicology Series University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 75254 9 Singer Peter 4 March 2015 The climax of moral sense theory Hutcheson and Hume Encyclopaedia Britannica Smith Michael Andrew January 1987 The Humean Theory of Motivation Mind New Series ed 96 381 36 61 doi 10 1093 mind XCVI 381 36 Spencer Mark G ed David Hume Historical Thinker Historical Writer Penn State University Press 2013 282 pages Interdisciplinary essays that consider his intertwined work as historian and philosopher Spiegel Henry William 1991 The Growth of Economic Thought 3rd Ed Durham Duke University Press Strawson Galen 2011 The Evident Connexion Hume on Personal Identity Oxford Scholarship Online doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199608508 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 960850 8 Strawson Galen 2014 The Secret Connexion Causation Realism and David Hume Chicago Studies in Ethnomusicology Series Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 960585 9 Strawson Sir Peter Frederick 2008 Freedom and Resentment and Other Essays Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 06087 0 Stroud B 1977 Hume Routledge London amp New York Swain Corliss Gaida 2008 Personal Identity In Traiger Saul ed The Blackwell Guide to Hume s Treatise Blackwell Guides to Great Works John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 4051 5313 3 Taylor A E 1927 David Hume and the Miraculous Leslie Stephen Lecture Cambridge pp 53 54 reprinted in his Philosophical Studies 1934 Taylor W L 1965 Francis Hutcheson and David Hume as Predecessors of Adam Smith Durham NC Duke University Press Waldmann Felix 2014 Further Letters of David Hume Edinburgh Edinburgh Bibliographical Society Wertz S K 1975 Hume History and Human Nature Journal of the History of Ideas 36 3 481 496 doi 10 2307 2708658 JSTOR 2708658 Wertz S K 1993 Hume and the Historiography of Science Journal of the History of Ideas 54 3 411 436 doi 10 2307 2710021 JSTOR 2710021 Wiley James 2012 Theory and Practice in the Philosophy of David Hume Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 02643 9 Wright John P 2009 Hume s A Treatise of Human Nature An Introduction Cambridge Introductions to Key Philosophical Texts Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 83376 9 Wright John P 1983 The Sceptical Realism of David Hume Studies in intellectual history and the history of philosophy Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 0882 5 Wright Richard 2010 Understanding Religious Ethics A Complete Guide for OCR AS and A2 Studies in intellectual history and the history of philosophy Oxford University Press Further reading editAdamson Robert Mitchell John Malcolm 1911 Hume David Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed pp 876 884 Ardal Pall 1966 Passion and Value in Hume s Treatise Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press Bailey Alan amp O Brien Dan eds 2012 The Continuum Companion to Hume New York Continuum Bailey Alan amp O Brien Dan 2014 Hume s Critique of Religion Sick Men s Dreams Dordrecht Springer Beauchamp Tom amp Rosenberg Alexander 1981 Hume and the Problem of Causation New York Oxford University Press Beveridge Craig 1982 review of The Life of David Hume by Ernest Campbell Mossner in Murray Glen ed Cencrastus No 8 Spring 1982 p 46 ISSN 0264 0856 Campbell Mossner Ernest 1980 The Life of David Hume Oxford University Press Gilles Deleuze 1953 Empirisme et subjectivite Essai sur la Nature Humaine selon Hume Paris Presses Universitaires de France trans Empiricism and Subjectivity New York Columbia University Press 1991 Demeter Tamas 2012 Hume s Experimental Method British Journal for the History of Philosophy 20 3 577 doi 10 1080 09608788 2012 670842 hdl 11858 00 001M 0000 002A 7F3A B S2CID 170120193 Demeter Tamas 2014 Natural Theology as Superstition Hume and the Changing Ideology of Moral Inquiry In Demeter T et al eds Conflicting Values of Inquiry Leiden Brill Garrett Don 1996 Cognition and Commitment in Hume s Philosophy New York amp Oxford Oxford University Press Gaskin J C A 1978 Hume s Philosophy of Religion Humanities Press International Harris James A 2015 Hume An Intellectual Biography Cambridge Cambridge University Press Hesselberg A Kenneth 1961 Hume Natural Law and Justice Duquesne Review Spring 1961 pp 46 47 Kail P J E 2007 Projection and Realism in Hume s Philosophy Oxford Oxford University Press Kemp Smith Norman 1941 The Philosophy of David Hume London Macmillan Narveson Jan Trenchard David 2008 Hume David 1711 1776 In Hamowy Ronald ed Nozick Robert 1938 2002 The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism Thousand Oaks CA SAGE Cato Institute pp 230 231 doi 10 4135 9781412965811 n220 ISBN 978 1412965804 Norton David Fate 1982 David Hume Common Sense Moralist Sceptical Metaphysician Princeton Princeton University Press Norton David Fate amp Taylor Jacqueline eds 2009 The Cambridge Companion to Hume Cambridge Cambridge University Press Radcliffe Elizabeth S ed 2008 A Companion to Hume Malden Blackwell Rosen Frederick 2003 Classical Utilitarianism from Hume to Mill Routledge Studies in Ethics amp Moral Theory ISBN 978 0 415 22094 1 Russell Paul 1995 Freedom and Moral Sentiment Hume s Way of Naturalizing Responsibility New York amp Oxford Oxford University Press Russell Paul 2008 The Riddle of Hume s Treatise Skepticism Naturalism and Irreligion New York amp Oxford Oxford University Press Stroud Barry 1977 Hume London amp New York Routledge Complete study of Hume s work parting from the interpretation of Hume s naturalistic philosophical programme Wei Jua 2017 Commerce and Politics in Hume s History of England Woodbridge Boydell and Brewer online review Willis Andre C 2015 Toward a Humean True Religion Genuine Theism Moderate Hope and Practical Morality University Park Penn State University Press Wilson Fred 2008 The External World and Our Knowledge of It Hume s critical realism an exposition and a defence Toronto University of Toronto Press External links edit nbsp Media related to David Hume at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Works by or about David Hume at Wikisource nbsp Quotations related to David Hume at Wikiquote The David Hume Collection at McGill University Library Works by David Hume at Project Gutenberg Works by or about David Hume at Internet Archive Works by David Hume at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Books by David Hume at the Online Books Page Hume Texts Online searchable texts with related resources Peter Millican Papers and Talks on Hume Peter Millican Research Bennett Jonathan David Hume Texts From Early Modern Philosophy PDF EPUB MP3 MOBI Translations of philosophical classics into contemporary English from English Latin French and German David Hume at Internet Encyclopedia of PhilosophyCausation Imagination Moral Philosophy Religion dd David Hume My Own Life and Adam Smith obituary of Hume Bibliography of Hume s influence on Utilitarianism The Hume Society publishes Hume Studies and holds conferences Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title David Hume amp oldid 1204390908, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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