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Routledge Philosophy Guidebook to Hume on Knowledge (Routledge Philosophy Guidebooks) PDF

232 Pages·1999·0.68 MB·English
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Routledge Philosophy GuideBook to Hume on knowledge ‘This book is written with admirable clarity, contains concise and helpful historical background, examines all the major issues in Hume’s epistemology including important sections of the Treatise which are all too often skipped over, and gives a good sense of scholarly controversies among commentators on the Treatise. It is an excellent introduction to Hume for both undergraduates and beginning graduate students, and contains material which should be of interest even to Hume scholars.’ Francis W.Dauer, University of California, Santa Barbara ‘This book gives us an accessible and philosophically sound discussion of the main themes of Hume’s Treatise.’ R.S.Woolhouse, University of York David Hume (1711–76) is one of the greatest figures in the history of British philosophy. Of all of Hume’s writings, the philosophically most profound is undoubtedly his first, A Treatise of Human Nature. Of the three books that make up the Treatise, the first, in which he outlines the epistemology and metaphysics underpinning his system, is universally acknowledged to be his greatest intellectual achievement. Hume on Knowledge thus provides us with a map to Book 1 of the Treatise and sets out its principal ideas and arguments in a clear and readable way. This book will enable any reader coming to the Treatise for the first time easily to understand the importance of and intricacies inherent in Hume’s thought. Harold W.Noonan is a Reader in Philosophical Logic at the University of Birmingham. He is the author of Objects and Identity and Personal Identity (available from Routledge). Routledge Philosophy GuideBooks Edited by Tim Crane and Jonathan Wolff University College London Kant and the Critique of Pure Reason Sebastian Gardner Mill on Liberty Jonathan Riley Mill on Utilitarianism Roger Crisp Wittgenstein and the Philosophical Investigations Marie McGinn Heidegger and Being and Time Stephen Mulhall Plato and the Republic Nickolas Pappas Locke on Government D.A.Lloyd Thomas Locke on Human Understanding E.J.Lowe Spinoza and Ethics Genevieve Lloyd LONDON AND NEW YORK R Routledge Philosophy GuideBook to O Hume U on knowledge T L E D G E (cid:1) Harold W.Noonan First published 1999 by Routledge British Library Cataloguing in 11 New Fetter Lane, Publication Data London EC4P 4EE A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Simultaneously published in the USA Library of Congress Cataloging in and Canada Publication Data by Routledge Noonan, Harold W. 29 West 35th Street, New York, NY Routledge philosophy guidebook to 10001 Hume on knowledge/Harold W. Noonan. Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & p. cm. Francis Group Includes bibliographical references and index. This edition published in the Taylor & 1. Hume, David, 1711–1776. Francis e-Library, 2003. Treatise of human nature. Book 1. 2. Knowledge, Theory of. 3. Philosophy of mind. I. Title. © 1999 Harold W.Noonan B1489.N66 1999 128–dc21 99–14365 All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced ISBN 0-203-01450-2 Master e-book ISBN or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, ISBN 0-203-22450-7 (Adobe eReader or in any information storage or Format) retrieval system, without permission in ISBN 0-415-15046-9 (hbk) writing from the publishers. ISBN 0-415-15047-7 (pbk) To the memory of Barrie Falk (1940–98) C Contents o n t e Preface ix n 1 Introduction: Hume’s life and work 1 Hume’s life and times 1 The structure of Book 1 of the Treatise and its t place in Hume’s work 5 The place of the Treatise in the history of philosophy: precursors, influences and effects 15 s Aims and methods 33 2 Hume’s theory of the mind 51 The contents of the mind 51 Impressions and ideas 60 The Copy Principle and the missing shade of blue 62 The Copy Principle and empiricism 65 The association of ideas 71 Abstract ideas 75 Hume’s theory of thought 87 vii CONTENTS 3 Causation, induction and necessary connection 91 The grounds of belief and the role of causation 91 The idea of cause 96 The Causal Maxim 103 Inference from the observed to the unobserved 110 The nature and causes of belief 131 The idea of necessary connection 140 4 The external world 161 The continued and distinct existence of body 161 The vulgar and philosophical forms of the belief in body 164 The causes of the vulgar form of the belief in body: constancy and coherence 173 The role of identity 177 The philosophical belief in double existence 182 5 The self and personal identity 187 The fiction of personal identity 187 The reification of perceptions 192 The rejection of the substantial self 198 Hume’s account of the source of the mistake 201 Objections to Hume 205 Bibliography 213 Index 217 viii Preface In this book I present a study of the most important themes in Book 1 of Hume’s first, and greatest, work: A Treatise of Human Nature. The exposition follows the order in which these themes appear in the Treatise. Thus, after an introductory chapter outlining the background to Hume’s thought and relating Book 1 of the Treatise to the rest of his work, the second chapter examines Hume’s theory of the mind, as found in Part I of Book 1; the third chapter is devoted to Hume’s discussion of causation, induction and the idea of necessary connection in Part III; and the remaining two chapters are concerned with the most significant and influential of Hume’s discussions in Part IV: Section 2, on belief in the external world, and Section 6, on personal identity. I am grateful to my colleagues at the University of Birmingham for the patience with which they have read and commented on successive redraftings of this material. References have been given in general according to the Harvard referencing system. However references to Locke’s An Essay Concerning Human Understanding are by book, chapter and section. Other occasional exceptions to the Harvard system are explained in the bibliography. H.W.N. ix

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