Locke Berkeley Hume Kant
Locke Berkeley Hume Kant
Locke Berkeley Hume Kant
PHIL 101
Rationalists believe that we are born with some ideas and concepts; that
they are innate.
Innate Ideas:
It seems to me a near
contradiction to say that there
are truths imprinted on the
soul which it perceives not.
False Ideas:
Nothing is ever invented by the mind; the
mind puts things together and constructs
true or false ideas.
False Complex Idea: Unicorn
Impressions: horse, horn, whiteness (each element, once
sensed, enters the theater of the mind in the form of a real
impression
Ideas: (idea of) horse, horn, whiteness
New Idea: Unicorn--in creating new complex ideas, we can only
work with the materials impressions provide. No idea, no
matter how abstract or complex, is more than a combination,
alteration, or abstraction from impressions
Inductive Reasoning:
Hume opposes all thoughts/ideas that cannot be traced back to
corresponding sense-perceptions
But we use complex ideas all the time without stopping to think
whether or not they correspond to sense perception
The problem occurs when we try to infer things from past
evidence--i.e. inductively
We observe patterns and infer that theyll continue in the future,
assuming nature will behave in a uniform way
E.G. We see the sun rise every morning and assume it will rise
again tomorrow.
Constant Conjunction:
What, then, is cause and effect? Force of Habit arrived at
through the experience of Constant Conjunction
Constant Conjunction is the human tendency to read or
project uniformity and causal connection into our
experience of isolated impressions
The grounds for our belief that the sun will rise tomorrow,
or that the eight-ball will move when the cue ball slams
into it, are not logical They are simply the result of our
conditioning.
I have no rational
grounds for my belief but
custom and habit tells me
that it is an indubitable fact
of life.
This judgement
cannot be
empirical,
because I cannot
observe future
risings of the sun.
Kant split knowledge into intuitions, gained from directl sensing the world, and
concepts, which come indirectly from our understanding. Some knowledge--of sense and
understanding--comes from empirical evidence, while some is known a priori
Key:
Empirical Knowledge
A priori knowledge
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