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David Hume

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David Hume s Skepticism The nature of ideas and reasoning concerning matters of fact David Hume 1711-1776 Prolific and successful writer on philosophy ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: David Hume


1
David Humes Skepticism
  • The nature of ideas and reasoning concerning
    matters of fact

2
David Hume 1711-1776
  • Prolific and successful writer on philosophy,
    history and economics published his Treatise at
    the age of 26.
  • Never held a university position (he was
    suspected of atheism).
  • The French called him le bon David.

3
Empiricism
  • Hume is called an empiricist, because of the
    emphasis he and his fellow empiricists placed on
    the contribution of experience to our knowledge.
  • Descartes is called a rationalist he and his
    fellow rationalists emphasized the importance of
    fundamental principles of thought that he regards
    as a priori, that is, as knowable independent of
    experience.

4
The source of ideas
  • For Hume ideas are merely faint images or copies
    of much more vivid experiences perceptions of
    the senses and emotional states.
  • This difference in liveliness (force or
    vivacity) is the real difference between the
    weaker states of mind we call ideas and other
    perceptions of the mind, which Hume proposes to
    call impressions.

5
The imagination
  • According to Hume we can freely combine our ideas
    in almost unlimited ways.
  • But the basic materials that we combine and
    rearrange so freely depend strictly on
    experience, i.e. on having previously had an
    impression, of which our idea is a kind of pale,
    weak copy.
  • Consider the contrast between Humes account of
    the idea of God and Descartes.

6
Arguing for the view
  • If you disagree, says Hume, give me an example of
    an idea that doesnt depend on experience in this
    way!
  • We find, whenever someone lacks a sense (sight,
    e.g.) or the opportunity to experience something
    (the dry Laplander, the mild mannered man), they
    also lack the corresponding ideas.

7
One contrary case
  • The missing colour
  • Given a complete sequence of shades with one gap
    where a shade is omitted, we seem able to imagine
    what that shade is like, i.e. to form the idea of
    that shade.
  • Hume thinks this exception is so singular that
    the general principle should be retained.
  • What allows this to happen? Can we think of any
    other such cases?

8
A method for inquiry
  • Since impressions are always more lively and
    clear, when we try to think about any idea (or
    the meaning of any philosophical term), we should
    always try to trace it back to the impression
    from which it is derived.
  • If we cant do this, we are justified in
    suspecting that the term is employed without any
    meaning or idea.

9
Operations of the Understanding
  • Relations of ideas
  • Geometry, Algebra, Arithmetic
  • Affirmations that are intuitively or
    demonstratively certain.
  • Matters of Fact
  • The contrary of these is possible.
  • Cant demonstrate such facts (otherwise their
    contraries would be contradictions and could
    never be distinctly conceived by the mind).

10
The Sun
  • The Sun will not rise tomorrow.
  • Though were sure this is false, we cant
    demonstrate that it is (to do so requires showing
    that its somehow contradictory, but it isnt we
    can distinctly conceive this happening).
  • So we have a puzzle (W)hat is the nature of
    that evidence which assures us of any real
    existence and matter of fact beyond the present
    testimony of our senses or the records of our
    memory?

11
Cause and Effect
  • The basis of all reasoning concerning matters of
    fact.
  • This is the link that connects any present or
    remembered facts to other facts that we infer
    from them.
  • (It also links our memories to the facts they are
    memories of.)
  • So how do we come by our knowledge of cause and
    effect?
  • Hume says we have no a priori grounds for this
    only experience can do the job.

12
An argument
  • No one can tell what the effects (or causes) of
    an entirely new and unfamiliar sort of thing will
    be.
  • Adam could not have known, simply from looking at
    it or feeling it, that water would suffocate him
    or fire burn him.
  • Familiar causes and effects may seem, to us, to
    be obvious but only experience makes them so
    (the billiard table).
  • How could the mind supply us with such
    information on its own? There are no necessary
    relations between (separate) facts!

13
Trouble
  • Now, how do we reason from experience to our
    conclusions about cause and effect?
  • Is this reasoning any good?
  • Hume is worried!
  • He says, even after we have experience of the
    operation of cause and effect, our conclusions
    from that experience are not founded on reasoning
    or any process of the understanding. (225)

14
Like causes, like effects?
  • We always presume when we see like sensible
    qualities that they have like secret powers.
  • Past experience applies only to those particular
    objects and situations.
  • It just doesnt follow that similar objects and
    situations will produce similar results. No
    reasoning justifies this expectation.

15
Experience and reason dont do it.
  • If something about a pattern of events shows that
    the pattern was necessary, we should see it (and
    be able to reason it out) the first time we
    experience the pattern.
  • Yet we dont reach the conclusion that the
    pattern must be followed in every instance when
    we first see it. We need repeated experience to
    reach this conclusion.

16
What does needing repetition show?
  • If some kind of argument links cause to effect,
    then we should be able, once weve clearly
    grasped the cause, to infer that the effect must
    follow.
  • If the argument infers a necessary connection
    from the experience of a repeated pattern, Hume
    asks what this medium joining cause and effect
    is supposed to be, and how repetition leads us to
    detect it?

17
Furthermore, it should be obvious
  • Animals and babies clearly reach these kinds of
    conclusions too.
  • So any reasoning (or experience) that tells us a
    pattern will continue should be obvious when we
    think about it.
  • if I be wrong (i.e.there is an argument
    linking cause to effect)I cannot now discover an
    argument whichwas perfectly familiar to me
    before I was out of my cradle.

18
What could repetition add?
  • Humes view is that the only thing repetition of
    the pattern could do for us is to build a pattern
    in us, a habit of regularly expecting the effect
    whenever we witness the cause.
  • Hume concludes that the experience of persistent,
    regular patterns leads us to form this kind of
    habitual expectation.
  • But theres no justification we can give for this
    expectation it really is just a habit.

19
The regress.
  • Hume asks what sort of justification we could
    give, of basing our expectations about the future
    on the experience of regular patterns in the
    past.
  • The only justification available seems to be that
    weve been successful, in the past, when we do
    this, i.e. these expectations have proven right.
  • But thats just another past pattern, and the
    question here is what reason we have to think
    that past regular patterns will continue into the
    future!

20
Skeptical Modesty
  • Hume defends a skeptical response to this puzzle.
  • Even though there is no reason to expect the
    future to resemble the past, nature leads us to
    this expectation.
  • A calm, skeptical attitude fits perfectly here
    we accept that we have no good reason for this
    expectation, but we have the expectation anyway.
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