David Hume
David Hume
David Hume
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. General Notions
II. Life and Works
III. Hume's Theory of Knowledge
IV. Negation of Metaphysics and Science
V. Religion and Ethics
VI. In Summary
I. General Notions
From this doctrine arose the problem of determining whether outside these
subjective representations there was a reality corresponding to them, and whether
this reality was knowable.
Locke, with some hesitation making use of the principle of causality, had
concluded affirmatively, by admitting the existence of substance as a support of
such sensations, and the existence of God.
George Berkeley, another leading empiricist, had attacked the distinction between
material and spiritual substance, and had denied the existence of the first, which he
reduced to a mode of sensation. He had, however, affirmed the existence of
spiritual substances, God and spirits.
Hume accepted dogmatically what had been the initial step for Locke and Berkeley
-- namely, that the object of knowledge is solely the sense impressions perceived
by the subject. But he did not allow himself to make any concession to classical
philosophy, as Locke had done by admitting the validity of the principle of
causality and the existence of substance. Nor was he guided by any dogmatic or
religious principles, such as those which had led Berkeley to admit the existence of
spiritual substance. Instead, Hume logically developed to its extreme conclusions
the empiristic principle that subjective impressions alone are the immediate
objects of knowledge. Passage outside our sensitive impressions is not possible.
Hence there is no metaphysics: we know nothing of God, of the exterior world,
or of our own soul.
David Hume (picture) was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1711. He studied at the
University in his native city, revealing a passionate interest in philosophy and
literature. During a sojourn in France, he wrote his Treatise on Human Nature, in
three volumes, which were published in 1739 and 1740. When this work did not
meet with the success its author expected, Hume rewrote it in a more popular form,
which he published successively under the titles Inquiry Concerning Human
Understanding and Inquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals.
Thus the impression is an actual vivid perception which, as Hume says, brings
with it conviction or positive belief in the existence of a corresponding objective
reality. The idea is an element derived from the impression, and hence is less vivid
than the latter; it is a copy which the impression leaves behind. It is one thing to
open my eyes and see the red tapestry in the room where I am sitting, the table on
which I am writing, and the objects which are on that table. It is another thing to
close my eyes and have the image of what I have seen in my room. The first
is impression, because it is vivid; the second is a weak representation of the first
and is an idea.
Impressions and ideas are not psychic atoms isolated from one another. They are all
linked together by an inclination to recall one another. This permits thought to pass
from an actual impression to the idea of other impressions obtained in the past, and
from these ideas to other ideas. This is the law of association of ideas, a
fundamental point in Hume's doctrine and the basis for complex ideas. Thus ideas
are naturally associated with one another and form large groups, and these groups
in turn are related, to form still larger groups. The belief that behind these groups of
representations there is a reality corresponding to them gives origin to belief in
an external world, regulated by the same laws that exist in the world of thought.
Hume distinguishes three type types of association: likeness, contiguity in time
and space, cause and effect.
How much absolute certainty are we able to attain? Hume admits only two
instances:
Hume's criticism aimed at the destruction of the concept of space and time, of
material and spiritual substance, of the principle of causality -- all of which are
essential to philosophy and science. Among Hume's criticisms the most famous
(historically) is the critique of the principle of causality, which we may summarize
as follows:
Motion in the second billiard ball is a quite distinct event from motion in the first;
nor is there anything in the one to suggest the motion of the other, without the
assistance of observation and experience. No man could infer merely from the
fluidity of water that it would suffocate him. All these observations are true in the
empiristic position of Hume, in which any idea is simply a copy of sensation. Thus
the idea of the motion of the first billiard ball does not contain anything to suggest
the motion of the second, and the idea of water does not include a priori the fact
that it would suffocate a man.
The necessary connection upon which the principle of causality is based is not
demonstrable, according to Hume, even by experience. Any fact -- for example, the
striking together of two billiard balls, or any other fact to which we apply the
concept of causality -- indicates to us nothing else but the constancy of the
contiguity and succession of the two objects. But the stable uniondoes not show me
a necessary connection between the two. In the supposition that it has been
observed by me and others that fact B is constantly joined with its antecedent, A,
this constant repetition does not authorize me to say that always in the future fact B
must follow upon fact A, and that between the two there is a necessary bond.
Hume states: "The repetition of perfectly similar instances can never alone give rise
to the original idea, different from what is to be found in any particular instance."
(Treatise on Human Nature, I, xiv.) Not even our activity and the effect of the will
upon the movements of our body and our spirit can give us the impression of
causality: "No relationship is more inexplicable," Hume adds, "than that which
exists between the faculties of though and the essence of matter."
Here the Cartesian questions concerning the interplay between "res extensa" and
"res cogitans" give Hume good arguments for denying the stability of causality,
even in the movements which proceed from our own selves. Thus it is necessary to
give up attributing any objective value to the idea of cause.
But whence comes the idea of causality, which undeniably exists? Hume answers
that it arises from a psychological fact formed in the following manner.
How then explain the idea of a world of beings separate and distinct from the
subject -- a conviction which everyone holds? What is the origin of this belief?
Hume gives the following explanation.
Many impressions, although intermittent and hence separable and distinct, are
presented as being constantly similar. By the law of association these impressions
evoke one another. Thought, in order to give itself an explanation of this stability,
is brought to believe that these impressions are identical, and that hence, beneath
them, there is some unchanging principle which gives unity to the sensible data that
appear to be the same in impressions. Thus arises the concept of duality of subject
and object, and, furthermore, the concept of substance as the support of
impressions.
I open my eyes, and I see the objects disposed in a certain manner in my room. I go
out, and after a time re-enter. The impressions which I receive of the position of
those objects are entirely similar to the preceding ones, and the same will happen if
I repeat the experience. These intermittent impressions are distinct, but they are
similar and recall one another to mind. Thought, in order to give itself a reason why
this can happen, is forced to admit the existence of some stable objective thing
which is the support or basis of these similar impressions. Consequently, this
concept of substance as the stable support of impressions, is not real, and is reduced
to a fiction of the subject, originating in the constancy of similar impressions.
Thus Hume arrives at the denial of all the basic concepts of scientific and
philosophical knowledge. So-called material and spiritual substances are only
aggregations of impressions and ideas. The most basic principles, such as the
principle of cause and effect, are reduced to psychological fictions, which are
explained through the mechanism of association and habit. Hume, better than
Berkeley, can say: "Omne esse est percipi" -- being is a mode of feeling.
Hume defends a natural religion which owes its being to practical motives:
Sentiments of terror and the need for protection in the face of the disturbing events
of life and of nature push man to belief in a being (God) endowed with superior
powers. Such sentiments carried primitive man to anthropomorphism, then to
polytheism, and finally to monotheism. Monotheism corresponds better to
intellectual exigencies, although man, because of practical necessities, never
succeeds in freeing himself from the idea of polytheism.
The fact of moral obligation also arises from motives of practicality. Hume does
not deny the distinction between the just and unjust as a datum of fact. But
according to him, if the reasons which have given origin to this distinction are
thoroughly examined, one comes to the conclusion that morality is the result of
the sentiment of sympathy. According to this position, man approves certain
actions of others as if they were his own, and approves of some of his own actions
because he believes that by these actions he will meet with the approval of others.
In morals, Hume set up the public good as the standard of right and wrong, and
assigns to feelings rather than to reason the task of applying this ethical norm.
VI. In Summary
Hume holds that the only thing that can be said, with full certainty, to exist is our
perceptions (impressions and ideas). In and among these perceptions there is no
causal connection; indeed, there is no knowable causality anywhere. If things
outside us really do exist, there is no proof of their existence available to us.