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David Hume
1711 - 1776

The Scottish philosopher David Hume developed a philosophy of
"mitigated skepticism," which remains a viable alternative to
the systems of rationalism, empiricism, and idealism.
If one
was to judge a philosopher by a gauge of relevance - the
quantity of issues and arguments raised by him that remain
central to contemporary thought - David Hume would be rated
among the most important figures in philosophy. Ironically, his
philosophical writings went unnoticed during his lifetime, and
the considerable fame he achieved derived from his work as an
essayist and historian. Immanuel Kant's acknowledgment that Hume
roused him from his "dogmatic slumbers" stimulated interest in
Hume's thought.
With respect to Hume's life there is no better source than the
succinct autobiography, My Own Life, written 4 months before his
death. He was born on April 26, 1711, on the family estate,
Ninewells, near Edinburgh. According to Hume, the "ruling
passion" of his life was literature, and thus his story contains
"little more than the History of my writings." As a second son,
he was not entitled to a large inheritance, and he failed in two
family-sponsored careers in law and business because of his "unsurmountable
aversion to everything but the pursuits of Philosophy and
general learning." Until he was past 40, Hume was employed only
twice. He spent a year in England as a tutor to a mentally ill
nobleman, and from 1745 to 1747 Hume was an officer and
aide-de-camp to Gen. James Sinclair and attended him on an
expedition to the coast of France and military embassies in
Vienna and Turin.
Major Works
During an earlier stay in France (1734-1737) Hume had written
his major philosophic work, A Treatise of Human Nature. The
first two volumes were published in 1739 and the third appeared
in the following year. The critical reception of the work was
singularly unfortunate. In Hume's own words, the Treatise "fell
dead born from the press." Book I of the Treatise was recast as
An Enquiry concerning Human Understanding and published in 1748.
The third volume with minor revisions appeared in 1751 as An
Enquiry concerning the Principles of Morals. The second volume
of the Treatise was republished as Part 2 of Four Dissertations
in 1757. Two sections of this work dealing with liberty and
necessity had been incorporated in the first Enquiry. Hume's
other important work, Dialogues concerningNatural Religion, was
substantially complete by the mid-1750s, but because of its
controversial nature it was published posthumously.
During his lifetime Hume's reputation derived from the
publication of his Political Discourses (1751) and six-volume
History of England (1754-1762). When he went to France in 1763
as secretary to the English ambassador, Hume discovered that he
was a literary celebrity and a revered figure among the
philosophes. He led a very happy and active social life even
after his retirement to Edinburgh in 1769. He died there on Aug.
25, 1776. He specified in his will that the gravestone be marked
only with his name and dates, "leaving it to Posterity to add
the rest."
"Mitigated Skepticism"
Skepticism is concerned with the truthfulness of human
perceptions and ideas. On the level of perception, Hume was the
first thinker to consistently point out the disastrous
implications of the "representative theory of perception," which
he had inherited from both his rationalist and empiricist
predecessors. According to this view, when I say that I perceive
something such as an elephant, what I actually mean is that I
have in my mind a mental idea or image or impression. Such a
datum is an internal, mental, subjective representation of
something that I assume to be an external, physical, objective
fact. But there are, at least, two difficulties inherent in
ascribing any truth to such perceptions. If truth is understood
as the conformity or adequacy between the image and the object,
then it is impossible to establish that there is a true world of
objects since the only evidence I have of an external world
consists of internal images. Further, it is impossible to judge
how faithfully mental impressions or ideas represent physical
objects.
Hume is aware, however, that this sort of skepticism with regard
to the senses does violence to common sense. He suggests that a
position of complete skepticism is neither serious nor useful.
Academic skepticism (the name derives from a late branch of
Plato's school) states that one can never know the truth or
falsity of any statement (except, of course, this one). It is,
however, a self-refuting theory and is confounded by life itself
because "we make inferences on the basis of our impressions
whether they be true or false, real or imaginary." Total
skepticism is unlivable since "nature is always too strong for
principle." Hume therefore advances what he calls "mitigated
skepticism." In addition to the exercise of caution in
reasoning, this approach attempts to limit philosophical
inquiries to topics that are adapted to the capacities of human
intelligence. It thus excludes all metaphysical questions
concerning the origin of either mind or object as being
incapable of demonstration.
Theory of Knowledge
Even though an ultimate explanation of both the subject or
object of knowledge is impossible, Hume provides a description
of how man senses and understands. He emphasizes the utility of
knowledge as opposed to its correctness and suggests that
experience begins with feeling rather than thought. He uses the
term "perception" in its traditional sense - that is, whatever
can be present to the mind from the senses, passions, thought,
or reflection. Nonetheless he distinguishes between impressions
which are felt and ideas which are thought. In this he stresses
the difference between feeling a toothache and thinking about
such a pain, which had been obscured by both rationalists and
empiricists. Both impressions and ideas are subdivided further
into simple and complex; for example, the idea of heat is
simple, while the idea of combustion is complex.
These simple divisions are the basis for Hume's "phenomenalism"
(that is, knowledge consists of "appearances" in the mind). Hume
distinguishes the various operations of the mind in a
descriptive psychology, or "mental geography." Impressions are
described as vivacious and lively, whereas ideas are less vivid
and, in fact, derived from original impressions. This thesis
leads to the conclusion that "we can never think of any thing
which we have not seen without us or felt in our own minds."
Hume often overestimates the importance of this discovery with
the suggestion that the sole criterion for judging ideas is to
remove every philosophical ambiguity by asking "from what
impression is that supposed idea derived." If there is no
corresponding impression, the idea may be dismissed as
meaningless. This assumption that all ideas are reducible, in
principle, to some impression is a primary commitment of Hume's
empiricism. Hume did admit that there are complex ideas, such as
the idea of a city, that are not traceable to any single
impression. These complex ideas are produced by the freedom of
the imagination to transform and relate ideas independently of
impressions; such ideas are not susceptible to empirical
verification. This represents the major paradox of Hume's
philosophy - the imagination which produces every idea beyond
sensible immediacy also denies the truth of ideas.
Theory of Ideas
Hume accepts the Cartesian doctrine of the distinct idea -
conceivability subject only to the principle of contradiction -
as both the unit of reasoning and the criterion of truth. But
the doctrine of the distinct idea means that every
noncontradictory idea expresses an a priori logical possibility.
And the speculative freedom of the imagination to conceive
opposites without contradiction makes it impossible to
demonstrate any matter of fact or existence. This argument leads
to a distinction between relations of ideas (demonstrations
which are true a priori) and matters of fact (the opposite of
which is distinctly conceivable). And this distinction excludes
from the domain of rational determination every factual event,
future contingent proposition, and causal relation. For Hume,
since truth is posterior to fact, the ideas of reason only
express what the mind thinks about reality.
Distinct ideas, or imaginative concepts, are pure antinomies
apart from experience as every factual proposition is equally
valid a priori. But Hume does acknowledge that such propositions
are not equally meaningful either to thought or action. On the
level of ideas, Hume offers a conceptual correlative to the
exemption of sensation as a form of cognition by his recognition
that the meaning of ideas is more important than their truth.
What separates meaningful propositions from mere concepts is the
subjective impression of belief.
Belief, or the vivacity with which the mind conceives certain
ideas and associations, results from the reciprocal relationship
between experience and imagination. The cumulative experience of
the past and present - for example, the relational factors of
constancy, conjunction, and resemblance - gives a bias to the
imagination. But it is man's imaginative anticipations of the
future that give meaning to his experience. Neither the
relational elements of experience nor the propensive function of
the imagination, from the viewpoint of the criterion of truth,
possesses the slightest rational justification. Hence the
interplay between the criterion of truth and the logic of the
imagination explains both Hume's skepticism and his conception
of sensation and intellection.
The most celebrated example of this argument is Hume's analysis
of the causal relation. Every statement which points beyond what
is immediately available to the senses and memory rests on an
assumption and/or extension of the cause and effect relation.
Let us examine two cases: I see lightning and hear thunder; I
see a rabbit and then a fox. The question is why I am right in
concluding that lightning causes thunder but wrong in believing
that rabbits cause foxes. Experience, in both instances, reveals
an A that is followed by B, and repeated experiences show that A
is always followed by B. While the constant conjunction of A and
B might eliminate the rabbit-fox hypothesis, it is of no help in
explaining causality because there are all sorts of objects,
such as tables and chairs, which are similarly conjoined but not
supposed to be causally related. Thus experience reveals only
that constant conjunction and priority are sufficient but not
necessary conditions for establishing a causal connection. And
it is necessity, understood as that which cannot be otherwise
than it is, which makes a relation causal in the propositional
form of "If A then B must appear and if no A then no B."
But if necessary connection explains causality, what explains
necessity? Experience yields only a particular instance and
tells us nothing about the past or the future. Nor is there any
necessity discoverable in repeated experiences. That the sun
will rise tomorrow because it has in the past is an assumption
that the past necessarily causes the future which is, of course,
the connection that is to be demonstrated. If experience cannot
account for necessity, then reason fares no better. I can always
imagine the opposite of any matter of fact without
contradiction. If someone tells me that Caesar died of old age
or that thunder is uncaused or that the sun will not rise
tomorrow, I will not believe him, but there is nothing logically
incorrect about such statements since for every probability
"there exists an equal and opposite possibility." Thus there is
no justifiable knowledge of causal connections in nature,
although this is not a denial that there are real causes. Man's
supposed knowledge results from repeated associations of A and B
to the point where the imagination makes its customary
transition from one object to its usual attendant, that is, "an
object followed by another, and whose appearance always conveys
the thought to that other."
Because of his skeptical attitude toward the truths of reason
Hume attempted to ground his moral theory on the bedrock of
feeling - "Reason is, and ought only to be, the slave of the
passions." In this, Hume followed the "moral sense" school and,
especially, the thought of Francis Hutcheson. The notion that
virtue and vice are to be derived ultimately from impressions of
approbation and blame or pleasure and pain shows that Hume
anticipated Jeremy Bentham's utilitarianism, a debt which the
latter acknowledged. Although Hume considered himself to be
primarily a moralist, this doctrine is the least original part
of his philosophical writings.
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This web page was last updated on:
11 December, 2008
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