Title: History of Philosophy Lecture 16 David Hume
1History of PhilosophyLecture 16David Hume
2David Hume
- David Hume
- 1711-1776
- Born in Edinburgh, Scotland. Attended the
University of Edinburgh at age 12. - Wrote his Treatise at College of la Fleche in
Anjou, France from 1734-39. - Influential works by Hume
- A Treatise of Human Nature, first published in
1739 - Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, first
published in 1748 - Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, first
published in 1779
3Hume Newton
- Hume aspires to do for human nature what Isaac
Newton did for nonhuman nature - A science of human understanding
- to provide principles of explanation both simple
and comprehensive. - Isaac Newton
- 1642-1727
- Invented the theory of universal gravitation
- every massive particle in the universe attracts
every other massive particle with a force that is
directly proportional to the product of their
masses and inversely proportional to the square
of the distance between them - Newtons three laws
- Every body remains in a state of rest or uniform
motion unless it is acted upon by an external
unbalanced force - F MA
- Action and reaction equal, opposite and
collinear. - Thought proper science never frames hypothesis
- A hypothesis is a principle of explanation not
derived from a close examination of the facts - Hypothesis not arrived at by by way of careful
analysis of the sensible facts are arbitrary
4Humes motivation
- Humes motivations for providing a science of
human understanding - Wants to debunk popular superstition
- Whatever cannot be demonstrated on the basis of
experience and reason - So he aims to show what the human understanding
both is and is not capable of. - If he can show that superstition claims to know
what no one could possibly know - And a science of human nature is fundamental
- We couldnt know the truths of mathematics,
natural philosophy or natural religion without
first knowing the extent of human understanding,
the nature of the ideas we employ or the
operations we perform in our reasoning. (Treatise
of Human Nature, Intro) - Should illuminate all human intellectual
endeavors.
5Hume on Descartes
- Hume on Descartes
- Descartes dualism, his doctrine of a separate
mind substance, frames a hypothesis. - For to me it seems evident, that the essence of
the mind being equally unknown to us with that of
external bodies, it must be equally impossible to
form any notion of its powers and qualities
otherwise than from careful and exact
experiments, and the observation of those
particular effectsAnd tho we must endeavour to
render all our principles as universal as
possibletis still certain that we cannot go
beyond experience and any hypothesis, that
pretends to discover the ultimate original
qualities of human nature, ought at first to be
rejected as presumptuous and chimerical.
(Treatise, Intro) - So in forming any principles of the mind or
understanding, we cannot go beyond what
experience gives us
6Perceptions
- So Hume thinks we must form principles of human
nature from the data. - The data Hume speaks of are what he calls
perceptions - All the contents of our minds when we are awake
and alert, which for Hume is all our ideas. - All the ideas of the sciences
- All the arbitrary and superstitious ideas
- Note that Hume holds the representational theory
of mind that we see in Berkeley and others. - Hume aims to draw a line between legitimate and
illegitimate ideas. - So Hume aims to uncover the origins of our ideas.
7Humes theory of Ideas
- Humes theory of ideas
- Perceptions can be divided into impressions and
ideas - Impressions
- Enter the mind with the most force and violence
- Sensations, passions and emotions
- Ideas
- The faint images of impressions in thinking and
reasoning - Examples
- If you slap a table with your hand, the sound you
hear is an impression and your recollection of
that sound is an idea - An exception A terrifying dream
8Simple and Complex perceptions
- Hume also distinguishes between simple and
complex perceptions - Simple perceptions
- single, solitary ideas.
- Example
- Complex perceptions
- built out of simples.
- Example
9Ideas and Impressions
- Ideas and Impressions
- For Hume it seems all the perceptions of the
mind are double, and appear both as impressions
and ideas (Treatise, I, 1, 1) - But Hume notices that this isnt correct for you
can have an idea that doesnt correspond to any
impression. - Example
- But Hume notes that such cases are only cases of
complex ideas. - So for every simple perception, our perceptions
are always double. - Every simple idea corresponds to a simple
impression that resembles it.
10Simple ideas depend on simple impressions
- Simple ideas depend on simple impressions
- Hume argues that every simple idea has some
simple impression as a causal antecedent. - To give a child an idea of scarlet or orange, of
sweet or bitter, I present the objects, or in
other words, convey to him these impressionsWe
cannot form to ourselves a just idea of the taste
of a pine-apple, without having actually tasted
it. (Treatise, I, 1, 1) - So the origin of all our ideas are impressions.
- Without an impression, there is no idea.
- A rule with devastating consequences!
11Tracing ideas to impressions
- Tracing ideas to Impressions
- So Humes rule is this if there is no impression
then there is no idea - But from this Hume infers that every meaningful
term is associated with an idea. - Determining if a term is meaningless
- Trace the idea associated with the term back to
an impression. - If you can do so
- If you try and fail
- All ideas, especially abstract ones, are
naturally faint and obscure The mind has but a
slender hold of them They are apt to be
confounded with other resembling ideas and when
we have often employed any term, though without a
distinct meaning, we are apt to imagine it has a
determinate idea, annexed to it. On the
contrary, all impressions, that is, all
sensations, either outward or inward, are strong
and vivid The limits between them are more
exactly determined Nor is it easy to fall into
any error or mistake with regard to them. When
we entertain, therefore, any suspicion, that a
philosophical term is employed without any
meaning or ideawe need but enquire, from what
impression is that supposed idea derived? And if
it is impossible to assign any, this will serve
to confirm our suspicion. (Enquiry, 99)
12The Association of Ideas
- The Association of Ideas
- The principles that bind impressions and ideas
together to produce the complex mental lives of
humans - The world of ideas if governed by the gentle
force of association. Association is a kind of
attraction - This gentle force operates without our consent,
will or even consciousness of it. - For Hume, the mind just works this way
- He isnt going to try to explain why, for to do
so would be to frame a hypothesis - He notes first that we should be able to test for
such principles by observing our own trains of
thought - It is evident that there is a principle of
connexion between the different thoughts or ideas
of the mind, and that, in their appearance to the
memory or imagination, they introduce each other
with a certain degree of method and
regularityWere the loosest and freest
conversation to be transcribed, there would
immediately be observed something, which
connected in all its transitions (Enquiry, 101)
13Principles of the Association of Ideas
- Hume thinks there are 3 principles of
association - To me, there appear to be only three principles
of connexion among ideas, namely Resemblance,
Contiguity in time or place, and Cause or
Effect. (Enquiry, 101) - Resemblance
- A picture naturally leads our thoughts to the
original. (Enquiry, 102) - Contiguity in time or place
- The mention of one apartment in a building
naturally introduces an enquiry or discourse
concerning the others. (Enquiry, 102) - Cause and effect
- And if we think of a wound, we can scarcely
forbear reflecting on the pain which follows it.
(Enquiry, 102)
14Relations of Ideas
- All objects of human enquiry are either relations
of ideas or matters of fact - Relations of ideas
- The sciences of geometry, algebra and arithmetic
- Three times five
- Discoverable by the mere operations of thought,
without dependence on anything existent in the
universe - Consider the contrary of a relation of idea
- Consider 2 added to 3 is not 5.
- This is False because of the way the ideas are
related to each other - Its denial is contradictory
- We need make no appeals to experience to know it
is false - Instead, we can know it is false by the mere
operation of thought
15Matters of Fact
- Matters of fact
- The contrary of a matter of fact
- is still possible
- never implies a contradiction
- Can be conceived by the mind with the same
facility and distinctness as the matter of fact
itself, as if ever so conformable to reality.
(Enquiry, 108) - False because of the way the world actually is or
turns out to be. - To determine its truth or falsity we must consult
the external world and experience - That the sun will not rise tomorrow is no less
intelligible and implies no more contradiction,
than that the sun will rise tomorrow
16Matters of Fact and the relation of cause and
effect
- Hume says that relations of ideas can be certain
but not so for matters of fact. - With matters of fact, our evidence is never great
enough to amount to certainty. This is because - All reasonings concerning matter of fact seem to
be founded on the relation of Cause and Effect.
By means of that relation alone we can go beyond
the evidence of our memory and senses. (Enquiry,
109) - The friend in France, the watch and the voice in
the dark - So when we reach beyond our perceptions, we do so
in virtue of the relation of cause and effect - A present impression is associated with some idea
such that the impression is taken to be the
effect of the idea
17Knowledge of the relation ofcause and effect
- For Hume, we cannot arrive at knowledge of
relations of cause and effect independently of
experience. - Our knowledge of cause and effect relations is
not a priori - nor can our reason, unassisted by experience,
ever draw any inference concerning real existence
and matter of factcauses and effects are
discoverable, not by reason, but by experience.
(Enquiry, 110) - Knowledge of the relations of cause and effect is
dependent on our having some prior experience of
the situation - Knowledge of relations of cause and effect is a
posteriori, dependent entirely on experience - So causal predictions are made based upon past
experience - If we have never had experience in dealing with a
particular relation of cause and effect, we
cannot make a prediction - An example
18Causal arguments arent valid
- An example of causation one billiard ball
strikes another on a billiard table - 1. I have seen one ball strike another many times
- 2. Each time, the ball that was struck has moved
- Thus, 3. The struck ball will move this time.
- But does 3 follow necessarily from 1 2?
- Isnt it possible that this time something
different will happen? - Validity?
- So Hume asks why we seem to always think that 3
follows from 1 2. - Dont we assume something like the following The
future will (in the relevant respect) be like the
past. - Validity!
- This premise is known as the principle of the
uniformity of nature.
19The principle of the uniformity of nature
- The principle of the uniformity of nature
- Says that the future will (in the relevant
respect) be like the past. - But how do we know this is true?
- It isnt contradictory to suppose that cause and
effect relationships might suddenly change - Whether the principle is true is not a relation
of ideas. It is a matter of fact - If we know the future is like the past, we do so
based upon experience. - Futures and pasts we have experienced
- So we get this argument in favor of the principle
of the uniformity of nature - 1. I have experienced many pairs of events that
have been constantly conjoined in the past. - 2. Each time I found that similar pairs of
events were conjoined in the future. - Thus, 3. the future will (in these respects) be
like the past. - But we find ourselves asking the same question
- Validity?
- Does 3 necessarily follow from 1 2?
20The non-justifiability of the principle of the
uniformity of nature
- So Hume thinks we have no good reason for
believing in the uniformity of nature. - It cannot rest on a rational foundation
- Never validity
- But for Hume it doesnt follow that we must give
up our belief in the uniformity of nature or in
causal relations... - We cannot do without them for survivals sake
- Nature will always maintain her rightsand
prevail in the end over any abstract reasoning
whatsoever. (Enquiry, 120) - But if beliefs in relations of cause and effect
arent rationally based, then what is their
foundation?
21The foundation of relations ofcause and effect
- Knowledge of cause and effect through experience
- When we experience the constant conjunction of
events, we form a habit of expecting the second
when we observe the first, and we believe the
first causes the second - So our belief in relations of cause and effect is
completely irrational - But we do believe in causation. We cannot help
it. But we believe in it by a kind of natural
instinct by custom and habit. - Human nature
- Custom, then, is the great guide of human life.
It is that principle alone, which 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. Without the
influence of custom, we should be entirely
ignorant of every matter of fact (Enquiry, 122) - So Hume is granting that we have a right to
believe in something irrational. - Descartes?
22The strength of causal relations
- Hume says that some causal relations come in
degrees - Some events are such that they are always
conjoined to another. - And other events are such that it is only just
often the case that when one occurs so does the
other. - So for Hume, the more constant the conjunction
between one event (A) and another (B), the more
probable we think it that a new experience of the
first (A) will be followed by one of the second
(B). - So we find ourselves believing those things most
confidently which are most regular in our
experience. Nature at work
23Necessary connection
- Causation is more than mere constant conjunction.
It is necessary connection. - To say X causes Y is to say X produces Y, if X
occurs Y must occur and that X has the power to
bring Y into being - Hume on the necessary connection in causation
- Hume aims to discover if such a necessary
connection is metaphysically real. He does so by
trying to trace the idea back to an impression. - So his question is can we ever observe this
necessary connection?
24The impression of a necessary connection
- So Hume asks do we have an impression of the
necessary connection? - Take the billiard ball example do you observe
the force or power that makes the second ball
move? Hume thinks not! - We are never able, in a single instance, to
discover any power or necessary connexion any
quality which binds the effect to the cause, and
renders the one an infallible consequence of the
other. We only find, that the one does actually,
in fact, follow the otherConsequently, there is
not, in any single, particular instance of cause
and effect, anything which can suggest the idea
of power or necessary connexion. (Enquiry, 136) - The same holds for mental states
- If you will your hand to move and your hand moves
there is no impression observable of the
connection between the willing and the moving of
the hand. All I observe is one thing followed by
another.
25The foundation of our idea of necessary
connection
- So we can get no impression of necessary
connection. - Upon the whole, there appears not, throughout
all nature, any one instance of connexion, which
is conceivable by us. All events seem entirely
loose and separate. One event follows another
but we can never observe any tie between them.
They seem conjoined, but never connected. And as
we can have no idea of any thing, which never
appeared to our outward sense or inward
sentiment, the necessary conclusion seems to be,
that we have no idea of connexion or power at
all, and that these words are absolutely without
meaning (Enquiry, 144) - Relations of cause and effect are learned from
experience and experience can only show us
constant conjunction - So the idea of a necessary connection is
meaningless - But from where then do we get the idea of
necessary connection? - After a repetition of similar instances, the
mind is carried by habit, upon the appearance of
one event, to expect its usual attendant, and to
believe that it will exist. This connexion,
therefore, which we feel in the mind, this
customary transition of the imagination from one
object to its usual attendant, is the sentiment
or impression, from which we form the idea of
power or necessary connexion. (Enquiry, 145)
26The impression of necessary connection
- The impression
- So the impression of necessary connection is felt
in the mind. - It is a kind of mental transition from cause to
effect. - It is an expectation felt in the mind, of one
event given another. - The expectation is habitual, like breathing.
- So we project a necessary connection on objective
events based upon our subjective experience, I.e.
our sentiment or feeling which comes from our
habit to expect one event following another.
27Causation a fiction
- Hume provides 2 definitions of cause
- Constant conjunction
- An object, followed by another, and where all
the objects, similar to the first, are followed
by objects similar to the second. (Enquiry, 146) - Necessary connection
- An object followed by another, and whose
appearance always conveys the thought to that
other. (Enquiry, 146) - So for Hume, causation as constant conjunction
and necessary connection is a fiction. - As far as experience goes, necessary connections
cannot be found. But we nevertheless apply such
a connection to our experience. - But since we appeal to causation to determine all
matters of fact, it appears we cannot come to
know any matter of fact. - What we cannot know and skepticism
28Hume on the soul
- Hume calls the soul the self
- As he did with the notion of causation, he wants
to consider whether the self is a meaningful term - So Hume considers whether we can trace the idea
of self back to some impression - So the question Hume asks is the term self
meaningless noise? - From what impression coud this idea be derived?
This question tis impossible to answer without
a manifest contradiction and absurdity and yet
tis a question, which must necessarily be
answerd, if we woud have the idea of self pass
for clear and intelligible. It must be some one
impression, that gives rise to every real idea.
But self or person is not any one impression, but
that to which our several impressions and ideas
are supposd to have a reference. If any
impression gives rise to the idea of self, that
impression must continue invariably the same,
thro the whole course of our lives since self
is supposd to exist after that manner. But
there is no impression constant and variable.
(Treatise, I, 4, 6)
29Humes argument
- Humes argument that the term self is
meaningless - 1. The term self is supposed to represent an
idea of something that continues unchanged
throughout a persons life. - 2. The idea of self is simple, not complex.
- 3. Without an impression, there is no idea.
- 4. So there must be an impression of self. (from
23) - This impression must be one that resembles our
idea of self. Our idea is of substance that
remains throughout the course of our lives
unchanging constant and invariable. - 5. There is no such simple impression of self.
- 6. So the term self is meaningless and we have no
idea of self. (from 3 5)
30Humes proof that there is no simple impression
of self
- Humes proof that there is no simple impression
of self - 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 removd
for any time, as by a sound sleep so long am I
insensible of myself, and may truly be said not
to exist. And were all my perceptions removd by
death, and coud I neither think, nor feel, nor
see, nor love, nor hate after the dissolution of
my body, I shoud be entirely annihilated, nor do
I conceive what is farther requisite to make me a
perfect non-entity. (Treatise, I, 4, 6) - So Hume simply looks in himself.
- He finds no impression of a simple, unchanging,
single substance underlying all our particular
impressions. - What Hume thinks we do find in ourselves
- Nothing but fleeting perceptions ideas,
sensations, feelings and emotions.
31Evaluating the Argument
- Evaluating the argument
- What about premise 1?
- What is our idea of self?
- Maybe Hume is going about this all backwards
- What about premise 2?
- Is the idea of self simple?
- Maybe premise 3 is false?
- Maybe we can push on his theory of ideas?
- And of course we could challenge premise 5.
- If we look inside ourselves, do we have an
impression of a simple substance?
32What the mind is
- So when Hume looks for an impression of self that
remains constant and unchanging he finds only
fleeting perceptions. - So for Hume the self is
- nothing but a bundle or collection of different
perceptions, which succeed each other with an
inconceivable rapidity, and are in a perceptual
flux and movementthe mind is a kind of theatre,
where several perceptions successively make their
appearance pass, re-pass, glide away, and mingle
in an infinite variety of postures and
situations. There is properly no simplicity in
it at any one time, nor identity in different
whatever natural propensity we may have to
imagine that simplicity and identity. The
comparison of the theatre must not mislead us.
They are the successive perceptions only, that
constitute the mind nor have we the most distant
notion of the place, where these scenes are
represented, or of the materials, of which it is
composd. (Treatise,I, 4, 6)
33Hume on the mind
- Hume on the self
- So the idea of self, like the idea of cause, is a
fiction or human construct. - As a self, we are nothing but a bundle of
perceptions. - The mind is no single substance.
- The mind is like a theatre.
- In the theatre an amazingly complex play
performs. - The players are the perceptions.
- The theatre is just the performance of the play
- So Descartes was wrong after all!
- Thought doesnt entail a thinker!
34Hume on Freedom
- Hume on freedom
- For Hume, freedom is a power of acting or not
acting, according to the determinations of the
will that is, if we choose to remain at rest, we
may if we choose to move, we also may. Now this
hypothetical liberty is universally allowed to
belong to everyone, who is not a prisoner and in
chains. (Enquiry, 159) - A person lacks freedom when he is in chains.
When he cannot do what he wants to do. He is
unfree because his actions are constrained,
against his will. - The unfree man who desires, wills and tries to
walk away - If the unfree mans chains are removed, he is
free to do what he wants - So some person P is free with respect to some
action A, when if P chooses to perform A, then
he performs A.
35Freedom and Determinism
- Freedom and Determinism
- So, for Hume, freedom is a kind of hypothetical
power to do something if one chooses to do it. - But one might worry that if a Newtonian world, a
world determined by mechanical laws, persists
there is no room for freedom of the will. - Determinism is the view that human actions
constitute no exception to the universal rule of
causal law. - And Hume admits that Human actions are caused in
the same sense as events in the material world.
We can observe no necessary connection in either
material or mental causation. Causation is just
regularity or constant conjunction. - men still entertain a strong propensity to
believe, that they penetrate farther into the
powers of nature, and perceive something like a
necessary connexion between the cause and the
effect. When again they turn their reflections
towards the operations of their own minds, and
feel no such connexion of the motive and the
action they are thence apt to suppose, that
there is a difference between the effects, which
result from material force, and those which arise
from thoguht and intelligence. (Enquiry, 156,
157)
36Humes compatibilism
- Humes compatibilism
- So for Hume causes are just constant
conjunctions, regularities. - But freedom is just a kind of regularity.
- It is the hypothetical power to do something if
we choose to do it. - The regularity of the actions we choose
following upon our choosing them - So if the world is wholly determined by causal
laws and yet freedom is just a causal law, we can
have both determinism and freedom of the will. - This is the view known as Compatibilism
- Humes Compatibilism and Naturalism man is just
another natural fact, like everything else in the
natural world, operating under natural causal
laws
37Questions about Humes account of freedom
- Questions about Humes account of freedom
- Questions unanswered
- What does this power of turning intention to
action amount to? - So isnt Humes explanation of freedom a kind of
surface or superficial explanation only? - Only the extension of freedom is given, not the
intension. - But of course Hume will say that he cannot give
an account or explanation of the power of willing
actions to be. - To do so would be to frame a hypothesis!
- But we still want to ask what is freedom of the
will?
38Hume on God
- Hume on God
- Hume is taken by many to be an atheist for Hume
shows that we have no good reason to believe in
God. - Hume sets out to show that several key arguments
for Gods existence are unsound. - First, he disproves the ontological argument
- Remember the ontological argument assumes
- You cannot think of God without thinking God
exists - For Hume, it may be that thinking of God entails
thinking that he exists but this concerns only
relations of ideas not matters of fact. - So pointing out that the thought of God includes
in it the thought of existence doesnt entail the
truth of the matter of fact that God exists. - A relation among ideas, even one that is
necessary, gets no traction and can have no
causal power on how things are in the world.
39Hume on Descartes first proof for Gods existence
- Descartes first argument for Gods existence
- 1. I have an idea of God
- 2. This idea must have a cause
- 3. The cause must be equal in formal reality to
the subjective reality of the idea - 4. I myself could not possibly be the cause
- 5. So God must be the cause of my idea
- Hume wants to deny premise 3.
- But Hume thinks that our idea of God as perfect
entity comes from reflecting on our own
imperfections - The idea of God, as meaning infinitely
intelligent, wise, and good Being, arises from
reflecting on the operations of our own mind, and
augmenting, without limit, those qualities of
goodness and wisdom. (Enquiry, 97-98)
40The idea of God in ourselves
- So for Hume, the origin of our idea of God is in
impressions of our imperfect selves. - We reflect on ourselves and find impressions of
imperfect intelligence and goodness. - From our impressions we can gain the idea of more
and less. - But then we can add our idea of more with our
ideas of intelligence or goodness. - In this way we get the idea of a being more
intelligent and good than we are. - We can then reiterate this inference until we get
perfection - Thus, the idea of perfect entity can come from an
object with less than perfect formal reality, for
the ideas of perfection can be formed from the
ideas of imperfection! - What would Descartes say in response?
41The argument from design
- The argument from design
- Look around the world Contemplate the whole and
every part of it You will find it to be nothing
but one great machine, subdivided into an
infinite number of lesser machines, which again
admit of subdivisions to a degree beyond what
human senses and faculties can trace and
explain.The curious adapting of means to ends,
throughout all nature, resembles exactly, though
it much exceeds, the productions of human
contrivance of human design, thought, wisdom,
and intelligence. Since therefore the effects
resemble each other, we are led to infer, by all
the rules of analogy, that the causes also
resemble, and that the Author of Nature is
somewhat similar to the mind of man, though
possessed of much larger faculties, proportioned
to the grandeur of the work which he has
executed. By this argument a posteriori, and by
this argument alone, do we prove at once the
existence of a Deity and his similarity to human
mind and intelligence. (Dialogues, II, 45)
42The argument from designformalized
- The argument from design
- 1. A machine is the effect of intelligence
- For every clock
- 2. The world is like a machine
- It is an ordered whole. Newtonian mechanics
tells us so. - So the world is like a clock
- 3. Thus, the world is the effect of some
intelligence - An argument a posteriori
- it is an argument that depends upon experience
and matters of fact - An argument by analogy
- Since worlds are like machines and machines have
designers so too does the world have a designer. - A causal argument
- The first premise and conclusion
43Humes response to the argument from design
- Hume raises many questions about the argument
from design - 1. A posteriori arguments are never valid and can
never entail their conclusions. Thus, the most
the argument from design can give us is
probability - 2. Causal arguments follow this principle the
cause must be proportioned to the effect. - If the cause be known only by the effect, we
never ought to ascribe to it any qualities,
beyond what are precisely requisite to produce
the effect. (Enquiry, 190) - But if you look around the world it certainly
isnt perfectly good, intelligent or wise. It
seems to have none of the qualities we attribute
to God and so cannot prove the existence of a
perfect God
44Humes third response to the design argument
- Taking the analogy seriously The analogy is
between machines and their designers and the
universe and its designer. - Many people often cooperate to make a machine ?
Many Gods - Wicked people can create technological marvels ?
a wicked God - Machines are made by mortals ? a Mortal God
- The best machines are a result of a long history
of gradual improvements. - But then Many worlds might have been botched and
bungled, throughout an eternity, ere this system
was struck out much labor lost many fruitless
trials made and a slow but continued improvement
carried on during infinite ages in the art of
world-making. (Dialogues, 36) - What Hume shows us here is that any of these is
possible. - And we have no way of knowing which are the
similarities between worlds and machines and
which are not.
45Humes final response to thedesign argument
- Humes final response
- There is one respect in which the universe is
entirely unlike machines - The universe is entirely singular
- We can infer the cause of a machine because we
have in the past experienced the constant
conjunction of machines and designers. - But if we apply this reasoning to the universe,
we would need past experience of the making of
worlds, such that worlds are constantly conjoined
to designers. And yet
46Skeptical doubts
- Causal arguments and skeptical doubts
- We cannot infer, by causal argument, the
existence of God. - Likewise, we cannot infer, by causal argument,
the existence of a material world beyond our
perceptions. - If we can have no impression of the conjunction
of an external object and the impression it
causes, we cant infer the existence of the
external object from any impressions of them we
might have. - And yet we cant ever observe the constant
conjunction of an external object and the
impression it causes - So then what we seem to have here is skepticism
- We have no reason to believe in God or an
external world
47Humes morality
- Humes morality
- Hume says first that the ultimate ends of human
action can never, in any case, be accounted for
by reason, but recommend themselves entirely to
the sentiments and affections of mankind, without
any dependence on the intellectual faculties.
(An Enquiry concerning the Principles of Morals,
163) - In the absence of a desire or passion, reason
alone cannot produce action. - Ask a man why he uses exercise he will answer
because he desires to keep his health
(Principles, 162) - Passion or desire motivate to action and reason
is inert. Reason is the slave of the passions. - Likewise for moral judgments, if they are to have
have effect on action, they must be motivated by
passions.
48Morality isnt a matter of fact
- Morality isnt a matter of fact
- Take any action allowd to be vicious Wilful
murder, for instance. Examine it in all lights,
and see if you can find the matter of fact, or
real existence, which you call vice. In
whichever way you take it, you find only certain
passions, motives, volitions and thoughtsThe
vice entirely escapes you, as long as you
consider the object. You can never find it, till
you turn your reflexion into your own breast, and
find a sentiment of disapprobation, which arises
in you, towards this action. Here is a matter of
fact but tis the object of feeling, not of
reason. It lies in yourself, not in the object.
So that when you pronounce any action or
character to be vicious, you mean nothing, but
that from the constitution of your nature you
have a feeling or sentiment of blame from the
contemplation of it. Vice and virtue, therefore,
may be compard to sounds, colours, heat and
cold, which according to modern philosophy, are
not qualities in objects, but perceptions in the
mind. (Treatise, II, 3, 1) - So virtue and vice arent primary qualities they
are secondary qualities. - We project onto the facts an idea of virtue or
vice which has an origin in a feeling in the
mind. - Note this is like our idea of the necessary
connection in causation which has its origin in a
feeling of expectation .. - This feeling is one of approval or disapproval
which are expressed in terms like good or bad,
right or wrong.
49Facts and values
- Facts and values
- The is ought problem says this an ought (or
value) cannot be derived from an is (or fact). - For Hume there are no value facts at all.
- Value has its origin in valuing, I.e. perceiving.
- So values are projections onto the facts and
facts have no value in and of themselves. - So the foundations of morality are found in
sentiment, in feelings of approval and
disapproval, not in reason.
50A scientific investigation of morality
- So if we conduct a scientific investigation of
morality it will consist in an investigation of
the things we approve and disapprove of and why. - Hume examines
- we tend to approve of the things which are
agreeable or useful, either to ourselves or to
others. - Agreeable things elicit our immediate approval
while useful things promote the occurrence of an
agreeable thing. - Hume also says one of the passions had by humans
is sympathy or what he calls fellow feeling. - This is why we can have concern for others or for
the greater good.
51Does Humes view imply Relativism
- A possible implication and reply to Humes
account of morality - Since a feeling or sentiment of approval or
disapproval seems relative to the individual
doesnt it follow that Humes account of morality
implies Moral Relativism? - Humes reply
- Sympathy is an original passion in human nature.
- It works toward a commanality in the moral sense
of us all.
52Hume the skeptic
- Hume the skeptic
- Causation is mere constant conjunction
- There is no good reason to believe in God, the
self, the objectivity of morals or an external
world. - Humes skepticism isnt Descartes though.
Descartes skepticism, which Hume calls antecedent
skepticism - recommends an universal doubt, not only of all
our former opinions and principles, but also of
our very faculties of whose veracity, say they,
we must assure ourselves, by a chain of
reasoning, deduced from some original principle,
which cannot possibly be fallacious or deceitful.
But neither is there any such original
principle, which has a prerogative above others,
that are self-evident and convincing Or if there
were, could we advance a step beyond it, but by
the use of those very faculties, of which we are
supposed to be already diffident. (Enquiry, 199) - So if you could doubt everything, there would be
no way back to rational belief - For to get back you would have to use the very
reasoning faculties you doubt
53Humes mitigated skepticism
- Humes mitigated skepticism
- The greater part of mankind are naturally apt to
be affirmative and dogmatical in their
opinionsBut could such dogmatical reasoners
become sensible of the strange infirmities of
human understanding, even in its most perfect
state, and when most accurate and cautious in its
determinations such a reflection would naturally
inspire them with more modesty and reserve, and
diminish their fond opinion of themselves, and
their prejudice against antagonistsIn general
there is a degree of doubt, and caution, and
modesty, which, in all kinds of scrutiny and
decision, ought for ever to accompany a just
reasoner. (Enquiry, 207-8) - An attempt to keep in mind the strange
infirmities of human understanding - Makes for modesty and caution
- It will teach us the limitations of our human
capacities - It will encourage us to devote our understanding
to the problems of common life
54The perils of skeptical doubt
- Hume
- ready to reject all belief and reasoning, and
to look upon no opinion even as more probably
or likely than another. Where am I, or what?
From what causes do I derive my existenceI am
counfounded with all these questions, and begin
to fancy myself in the most deplorable condition
imaginable, invirond with the deepest darkness,
and utterly deprivd of the use of every member
and faculty. (Treatise, I, 4, 7) - So the skeptical conclusions of his philosophy
have lead Hume into depression and utter
paralysis. - It is a kind of philosophical melancholy and
delirium, a shivering terror at our lack of
certainty
55Escaping the perils of skeptical doubt
- Escaping the perils of skeptical doubt
- Most fortunately it happens, that since reason
is incapable of dispelling these clouds, nature
herself suffices to that purpose, and cures me of
this philosophical melancholy and delirium,
either by relaxing this bent of mind, or by some
avocation, and lively impression of my senses,
which obliterate all these chimeras. I dine, I
play a game of back-gammon, I converse, and am
merry with my friends and when after three or
four hours amusement, I woud return to these
speculations, they appear so cold, and straind,
and ridiculous, that I cannot find in my heart to
enter into them any farther. (Treatise, I, 4, 7) - We cant escape the depression through reason
- Nature is always too strong for principle.
- Custom and habit ensure that we dont sit
shivering in terror at our lack of certainty. - Maybe it takes one lively impression of the
senses - Activities of every day life
56Final thoughts on Hume
- If philosophy has lead us into such drastic
doubts about our nature, where can it take us - The value of the science of human nature has
provided us with the limits and scope of our
understanding. - It frees us from the dogmatism and superstition
that plagues man - Problems for Humes view
- Challenging his theory of ideas
- Could we challenge his rule that for every idea
there is a corresponding impression? - Challenging Empiricism
- Rationalism instead?
- Challenging the Newtonian model
- Why a Newtonian model for human nature?