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Although Hume insists that sympathy, or fellow feeling, is
fundamental to moral judgment, he recognizes that sympathetically
acquired feelings vary in strength according to a number of
circumstances that are irrelevant to an impartial spectator. How
can the changeableness of sympathy be reconciled with a stable
moral judgment? It emerges that sympathetic judgment becomes
corrected by adopting more general points of view'.Specifically,
the theory of belief and general rules in Bk. I of the Treatise
accounts for the prejudice which besets the moralist and the method
which corrects such prejudice. It is urged that without a full
appreciation of Hume's doctrine of belief and general rules in Bk.
I of the Treatise, his ideas about moral judgment in Bk. III are
far too brief to be understood and are therefore subject to a
number of misconceptions.Part One of the present work examines
Hume's ideas about human reason and Part Two aims to clarify Hume's
notion of sympathy. Both parts seek to explain how certain trivial'
tendencies of imagination are responsible for the unreasonable
judgment of fact and the partial judgment of merit. These
over-generalizing tendencies generate the general rules of the
imagination. It is by means of the general rules of the
understanding, the rules which regulate initial judgments by an act
of reflection, that factual judgments become reasonable and moral
judgments impartial. What is of interest is the ongoing dialectic
of the two sorts of general rules, a conflict of reason and
imagination, which Hume never resolves. Although it is concluded
that Hume's theory of moral judgment ends with the same skepticism
as does his theory of belief and general rules at theclose of Bk.
I, it also emerges that reason and imagination play a positive role
in the development of science and morality.
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