РефератыИностранный языкDaDavid Hume Essay Research Paper David Hume1

David Hume Essay Research Paper David Hume1

David Hume Essay, Research Paper


David Hume


1. Hume says, If we would satisfy ourselves, therefore, concerning the


nature of that evidence, which assures us to matters of fact, we must


enquire how we arrive at the knowledge of cause and effect. Hume then


makes the claim that; knowledge of this relation is not, in any instance,


attained by reasonings a priori. The support for this claim is that


knowledge of cause and effect arises entirely from experience. If you


presented an object to a man that he had never come in contact with, he


would not be able to give you the causes or the effects of this mysterious


object. You can not tell the causes or effects of a new object from the


qualities, which appear to the senses. Hume writes, nor does any man


imagine that the explosion of gunpowder, or the attraction of a loadstone,


could ever be discovered by arguments a priori. Only through experiences


with gunpowder and a loadstone would you be able to know the cause, which


produced it, or the effects, which will arise for it. Hume writes, When


we reason a priori, and consider merely any object or cause, as it appears


to the mind, independent of all observations, it never could suggest to us


the notion of any distinct object, such as its effect; mush less, show us


the inseparable and inviolable connexion between them. A man must be very


sagacious who could discover by reasoning that crystal is the effect of


heat, and ice and cold, without being previously acquainted with the


operation of these qualities. Therefore, cause and effect is learned


through experience.


2. The circular reasoning in Section IV, Part II, paragraph 6, is, we have


said that all arguments concerning existence are founded on the relation of


cause and effect; that our knowledge of the relation is derived entirely


from experience; and that all our experimental conclusions proceed upon the


supposition that the future will be conformable to the past. If we are to


put trust in past experience and make it the standard of our future


judgement then the arguments to support the statement must be probable or


matter of fact and real existence. There is no such argument to support


the supposition. To attempt and prove the last statement about the future


being conformable to the past by probable arguments is evidently going in a


circle because no probable argument exists.


3. When a man says, I have found, in all instances, such sensible


qualities conjoined with such secret powers: And when he says, Similar


sensible qualities will always be conjoined with similar secret powers


This is the problem with induction as Hume saw it. When people experience


similarity among natural objects, they then to form conclusions based on


reoccurring observations. If every zebra I saw had stripes, I would come


to the conclusion that all zebras had stripes. The problem is that I have


not seen all zebras, so my conclusion about zebras might be false. All the


premises about zebras might be true, but my conclusion could be false. It


is likely to some degree that all zebras I see will have stripes, but it is


possible that my conclusion is wrong. I can imagine a zebra without


stripes, but I have never seen one. That does not mean it does not exist.


Hume’s solution


1. Once a person acquires more experience and has lived long enough to


observe similar objects, he will constantly infer the existence of one


object from the appearance of the other. He has not from all his


experience acquired any idea or knowledge of the secret power by which the


one object produces the other. He will continue in this same course of


wrongful thinking. This is the problem. Hume presents a sceptical


solution to this problem. His solution is, This principle of Custom or


Habit. For wherever the repetition of any particular act or operation


produces a propensity to renew the same act or operation, without being


impelled by any reasoning or process of the understanding, we always say,


that this propensity is the effect of Custom. This solution gives us the


answer as to why we believe that all zebras have stripes. It is a solution


to the problem of induction. It is a principle of human nature. All


inferences from experience, therefore, are effects of custom, not of


reasoning. Custom is the guide to the future; it allows us to except a


similar course of events with those that have appeared in the past.


2. It does not seem like a solution to the problem. The problem is people


tend to form beliefs about objects through experience. If every Nintendo I


saw was black, then I would form the belief that all Nintendo’s are black.


But in my mind I can conceive a blue Nintendo, but still believe that no


such thing exists. Also, I have not seen ever Nintendo in the world so it


is possible that somewhere there is a blue Nintendo. This principle of


Custom that Hume provides as an answer to the problem is not really a


solution. I believe that it is merely a definition. He says that when we


repeatedly see any particular act or operation, we produce the belief that


the act or operation will repeat itself again because of the effect of


Custom. That does not help us any with the problem. It just defines why


we have the problem. I don’t believe that Hume’s solution takes us any


farther, but it does clarify the problem a little more.

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