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Hume's Presence in The Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion (Hardcover)
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Hume's Presence in The Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion (Hardcover)
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Why did David Hume feel so deeply about publishing The Dialouges
Concerning Natural Religion that he set aside funds in his will
providing for its posthumous publication? Part of the answer is
that it provided a literary, satirical work responding to his
mean-spirited theological critics. In Hume's Presence Robert J.
Fogelin provides a textual analysis that demonstrates the close
relationship of The Dialogues with his central philosophical
writings and its centrality to his relationship with skepticism. A
striking feature of The Dialogues is that Cleanthes and Philo seem
well versed in the works of the philosopher David Hume. Their
arguments often echo in content-even wording-claims found in Hume's
central philosophical writings. Beyond this, the overall
dialectical structure of The Dialogues mirrors dialectical
developments found in both The Treatise of Human Nature and the
Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding: the naturalistic effort to
provide a rational defense of religion ends in weakening religious
commitments rather than in strengthening them. Nowhere in The
Dialogues does Hume address his readers directly. As a result, it
may not immediately be clear whether Hume is expressing his own
opinions through one of his characters or is using a character to
represent a position he wishes to examine, perhaps to reject. The
Dialogues is a contest, and Hume, by not speaking directly in his
own voice, leaves it-officially, at least-to his readers to judge
who, if anyone, wins. The central problem of The Dialogues is to
consider what Hume understood by skepticism. The second section of
this book examines competing views of Hume's skepticism, concluding
with his own remarks. In the Treatise and the Enquiry, Hume says,
when consumed by skeptical arguments and reasoning, he finds
philosophical nurture in rejoining the practices of everyday life.
His famous, concluding remark in The Dialogues about skepticism
being the basis for a believing Christian seems cut from the same
cloth.
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