Pages: 160 (Paperback) Editor: Martin Bell ISBN: 0140445366 Pub: Penguin Classics Pub date: 1990-02-22 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 425816
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Reader Reviews:Does God exist? (6/6 people found this helpful)David Hume, a philosopher of the period often classified as British Empiricism, is the intellectual associate of philosophers John Locke and George Berkeley. Born in Edinburgh in 1711, he attended the University of Edinburgh but did not graduate. He went to France during his 20s, and spent time there working on what would become his most famous work, 'An Enquiry into Human Understanding', first published under the title 'Treatise of Human Nature'. However, Hume was a prolific writer, and dealt with many areas of philosophy, including politics and ethics, epistemology, and metaphysics. He wrote in the area of history as well, and had a politic career as British ambassador to France and a post as a minister in the government for a few years. His final work, 'Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion', was published posthumously in 1779, although work had begun on it as early as the 1750s. Hume was very concerned about rationality. Hume was never publicly and explicitly an atheist, but his rational mind, concerned about sensory and intelligible evidence, led him to question and doubt most major systems of religion, including the more general philosophical sense of religion and proofs of the existence of God. The primary arguments in his 'Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion' deal with the Argument from Design, and the Cosmological Argument. There is an assumed distinction here between natural religion and revealed religion, an especially important distinction in the Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment philosophical structure. - Natural Religion and Revealed Religion - - The Argument from Design - - Machines are designed by beings with intelligence. This is an argument by analogy, and is convincing to some, but often more convincing to those already inclined to believe in the existence of God. - The Cosmological Argument - Hume would have been familiar with Leibniz's more subtle form of the Cosmological Argument, which argues for a world of infinite contingent causes. However, there has to be something outside of this system of infinite causes that produced the series - thus, even in a universe with no set beginning or ending, there would still need to be an overarching cause. - Hume's Arguments - With regard to the Cosmological Argument, the argument is a little more strained. Hume argues that, in any series of causality, once one knows about each cause, it makes no sense to inquire beyond the sequence of causes to some other effect. This is a very Empirical argument, to be sure, and while perhaps not entirely satisfying, it still has merit in philosophy to this day. - Hume's Structure - Hume, despite many years of work on this text, probably never quite thought it was finished. He left the work to Adam Smith (the noted economist, and friend of Hume in Edinburgh), who also thought the arguments against the existence of God were too strong, and likely too damaging to Hume's overall reputation. The tug-of-war over the publication makes for interesting reading in and of itself. These are important arguments, worthy of discussion and dialogue in philosophy classes, theology classes, and among others who ponder the existence of God. Similar ProductsRoutledge Philosophy Guidebook to Hume on Religion (Routledge Philosophy Guidebooks) Riddles of Existence: A Guided Tour of Metaphysics Leibniz (Routledge Philosophers) Logic with Trees: Introduction to Symbolic Logic Five Dialogues: Euthyphro, Apology, Crito, Meno, Phaedo CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
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