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Hume's Skeptical Crisis - A Textual Study (Hardcover)
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Hume's Skeptical Crisis - A Textual Study (Hardcover)
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In Hume's Skeptical Crisis Robert Fogelin provides a textual study
of the changes in perspective that emerged as Hume pursued his
attempt to introduce the experimental method of reasoning into
moral subjects--the subtitle of the Treatise of Human of Nature. In
the process of giving an account of the operations of the human
mind, Hume discovered that the mechanisms that create and sustain
our beliefs are deeply unreliable and, in fact, capricious in their
operations. Hume's crisis emerged when he recognized that the
weaknesses that he ascribed to the operations of the human mind
apply with equal force to the operations of his own mind. How, he
asked himself, could he justify pursuing profoundly difficult
investigations employing mental faculties that were manifestly not
up to the task? His response was to trim back the ambitious program
announced at the start of the Treatise.
Hume returned to this topic in the opening section of the Enquiry
Concerning Human Understanding, where, in a more circumspect mood,
he weighed the reasons for and against pursuing what he calls
abstruse philosophy. Given our limited capacities and the
complexities of the subject, what, he asked, are the chances of
success in pursing abstruse philosophical investigations? Hume
answered that we could expect at least modest success by adopting
the stance of a mitigated skeptic, where one cautiously examines
only those topics suitable to our limited mental capacities. Hume
held that this standpoint could be attained by counter-balancing
radical Pyrrhonian doubt on one side with our non-rational
instincts to believe on the other side. As a result, Hume's initial
attempt to produce a "compleat system of the sciences" was
transformed into "reflections of common life, methodized and
corrected."
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