Up@dawn 2.0

Saturday, October 14, 2017

Quiz Oct 19

David Hume -"How Hume helped me solve my midlife crisis, Simon Blackburn on David Hume, David Hume's essays on happiness; see also Essays Moral, Political, Literary; The ScepticDavid Hume-a new perspective; LISTEN: Gopnik on Hume & Buddhism (PB); Hume, In Our Time; WATCH: Hume on miracles

Up@dawn-The Happy Heretic, Hume

[HINT: four of the quiz answers can be found by scrolling down in this post. All can be found in the linked texts above.]

1. David Hume's "really great" anti-Cartesian idea about the self, says Alison Gopnik, is that it does not require what?

2. Like Hume, Gopnik says, she found her salvation where?

3. Hume's _____ (mitigated, exaggerated) skepticism aimed to counter the "overconfidence and dogmatism [that] led to intolerance, to faction, to a lot of the crimes of human history."

4. What is Hume's "pragmatic insight" about reason, the passions, and action, as summarized in his credo "be a philosopher, but... be still a man" and implied by his suggestion that "reason is always the slave of the passions"?

5. Hume's essays on happiness include the perspectives of a stoic, an epicurean, a platonist, and a what?

6. Hume believes that_____ is the medicine of the mind, an antidote to the miseries caused by superstition and false religion.

DQ
1. Comment: "Experience is enough all by itself. What do you lose when you give up God or “reality” or even “I”? The moon is still just as bright..."

2. Are curiosity and experience enough to secure your happiness?

3. Is skepticism the most effective antidote to dogmatism and intolerance?

4. Do you agree that "success in action is the mother of thought"? (What would a Taoist say?)

5. Do acceptance, simple pleasures, perfectionism, and skepticism each have an important place in your personal pursuit of happiness? Which, if any, is more important?

6. Is philosophy mainly a theoretical or a practical discipline? Comment: "Hume's cure for philosophical melancholy and delirium --I dine, I play a game ofback-gammon, I converse, and am merry with my friends..."



The 18th-century writer David Hume is one of the world’s great philosophical voices because he hit upon a key fact about human nature: that we are more influenced by our feelings than by reason. This is, at one level, possibly a great insult to our self-image, but Hume thought that if we could learn to deal well with this surprising fact, we could be (both individually and collectively) a great deal calmer and happier than if we denied it.

Hume was born in Edinburgh in 1711 to a family that was long established but far from rich. He was the second son, and it was clear early on that he would need to find a job eventually. But nothing seemed to suit him. He tried law (the vocation of his father and older brother), but soon decided that it was “a laborious profession” requiring “the drudgery of a whole life.” He was considered for academic posts at the University of Edinburgh and the University of Glasgow, but he didn’t land either job...

He died in Edinburgh, in August, 1776, at home in his house in St. Andrew’s Square. His doctor wrote about the last hours to Adam Smith – for many years Hume’s best friend:

‘He continued to the last perfectly sensible, and free from much pain or feelings of distress. He never dropped the smallest expression of impatience; but when he had occasion to speak to the people about him, always did it with affection and tenderness… He died in such a happy composure of mind, that nothing could exceed it.’

Hume remains that rather outstanding thing: a philosopher alive to how much philosophy has to learn from common sense. SoL/BoL
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ALISON GOPNIK is a developmental psychologist, author of The Philosophical Baby and The Scientist in the Crib. Her TED Talk: "What Do Babies Think?" She credits Hume with rescuing her from her midlife crisis:

...Joy vanished. Grief took its place. I’d chosen my new room for its faded grandeur: black-oak beams and paneling, a sooty brick fireplace in lieu of central heating. But I hadn’t realized just how dark and cold the room would be during the rainy Northern California winter. I forced myself to eat the way I had once coaxed my children (“just three more bites”), but I still lost 20 pounds in two months. I measured each day by how many hours had gone by since the last crying jag (“There now, no meltdowns since 11 this morning”).

I couldn’t work. The dissolution of my own family made the very thought of children unbearable. I had won a multimillion-dollar grant to investigate computational models of children’s learning and had signed a contract to write a book on the philosophy of childhood, but I couldn’t pass a playground without tears, let alone design an experiment for 3-year-olds or write about the moral significance of parental love.

Everything that had defined me was gone. I was no longer a scientist or a philosopher or a wife or a mother or a lover.

My doctors prescribed Prozac, yoga, and meditation. I hated Prozac. I was terrible at yoga. But meditation seemed to help, and it was interesting, at least. In fact, researching meditation seemed to help as much as actually doing it. Where did it come from? Why did it work?

I had always been curious about Buddhism, although, as a committed atheist, I was suspicious of anything religious. And turning 50 and becoming bisexual andBuddhist did seem far too predictable—a sort of Berkeley bat mitzvah, a standard rite of passage for aging Jewish academic women in Northern California. But still, I began to read Buddhist philosophy.

In 1734, in scotland, a 23-year-old was falling apart.

As a teenager, he’d thought he had glimpsed a new way of thinking and living, and ever since, he’d been trying to work it out and convey it to others in a great book. The effort was literally driving him mad. His heart raced and his stomach churned. He couldn’t concentrate. Most of all, he just couldn’t get himself to write his book. His doctors diagnosed vapors, weak spirits, and “the Disease of the Learned.” Today, with different terminology but no more insight, we would say he was suffering from anxiety and depression. The doctors told him not to read so much and prescribed antihysteric pills, horseback riding, and claret—the Prozac, yoga, and meditation of their day.The young man’s name was David Hume. Somehow, during the next three years, he managed not only to recover but also, remarkably, to write his book. Even more remarkably, it turned out to be one of the greatest books in the history of philosophy: A Treatise of Human Nature.

In his Treatise, Hume rejected the traditional religious and philosophical accounts of human nature. Instead, he took Newton as a model and announced a new science of the mind, based on observation and experiment. That new science led him to radical new conclusions. He argued that there was no soul, no coherent self, no “I.” “When I enter most intimately into what I call myself,” he wrote in the Treatise, “I always stumble on some particular perception or other, of heat or cold, light or shade, love or hatred, pain or pleasure. I never can catchmyself at any time without a perception, and never can observe any thing but the perception.”Hume had always been one of my heroes. I had known and loved his work since I was an undergraduate. In my own scientific papers I’d argued, like Hume, that the coherent self is an illusion. My research had convinced me that our selves are something we construct, not something we discover. I had found that when we are children, we don’t connect the “I” of the present to the “I” of the past and the future. We learn to be who we are.

Until Hume, philosophers had searched for metaphysical foundations supporting our ordinary experience, an omnipotent God or a transcendent reality outside our minds. But Hume undermined all that. When you really look hard at everything we think we know, he argued, the foundations crumble. Descartes at least had said you always know that you yourself exist (“I think, therefore I am”), but Hume rejected even that premise.

Hume articulates a thoroughgoing, vertiginous, existential kind of doubt. In theTreatise, he reports that when he first confronted those doubts himself he was terrified—“affrighted and confounded.” They made him feel like “some strange uncouth monster.” No wonder he turned to the doctors.

But here’s Hume’s really great idea: Ultimately, the metaphysical foundations don’t matter. Experience is enough all by itself. What do you lose when you give up God or “reality” or even “I”? The moon is still just as bright; you can still predict that a falling glass will break, and you can still act to catch it; you can still feel compassion for the suffering of others. Science and work and morality remain intact. Go back to your backgammon game after your skeptical crisis, Hume wrote, and it will be exactly the same game.

In fact, if you let yourself think this way, your life might actually get better. Give up the prospect of life after death, and you will finally really appreciate life before it. Give up metaphysics, and you can concentrate on physics. Give up the idea of your precious, unique, irreplaceable self, and you might actually be more sympathetic to other people... (continues)
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BLACKBURN:

Simon Blackburn on David Hume


Simon Blackburn is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge. He was Edna J. Doury Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the University of North Carolina, and from 1969 to 1990 was a Fellow and Tutor at Pembroke College, Oxford. He is the author of The Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy and the best-selling Think and Being Good, among other books.
Hume had a message he wanted to get out — particularly as regards skepticism about religion — but he was no proto-Richard Dawkins, says Simon Blackburn. He chooses the best books on David Hume. 
Why are you so fond of David Hume as a philosopher?
There are two reasons. One is that I admire a great many of his doctrines. The other, perhaps more personal, is that I very much admire and love him as a man. He lived an admirable life and a warm, generous spirit breathes through all his writings. I find that very attractive. 
That leads neatly into your first book choice, which is Ernest Mossner’s The Life of David Hume.
This is the standard life of Hume. There are others, but Mossner seems to hold the field. It was the book that introduced me to Hume’s life and biography, so it was formative in that respect. It bears out what I just said, that Hume was a very loveable, admirable, man. He had this great generosity and benevolence and was very much adored by everyone who knew him.
Can you tell us a bit about who David Hume was?
He was born in the Lowlands of Scotland in 1711. His family were small-scale farmers but well enough off for him to get a good education. He went to Edinburgh University at a young age, and then with various interruptions — not many — he lived the life of a scholar. He devoted a great deal of time to learning, to reading and, of course, eventually to writing. He started writing very young: the Treatise, which many people think is his masterpiece, and is certainly a very important book in the history of philosophy, was written by 1739, when he was still only 28. He got off the blocks pretty quickly, and he never stopped writing after that.
He actually lived as a writer, didn’t he, because he was excluded from all kinds of academic posts?
Yes, notoriously he didn’t get the chair at Edinburgh, largely because of hostility from entrenched religious interests and the Church of Scotland, the Presbyterian church here.
And that was because he was presumed to be an atheist?
Yes, although it was not a term he liked to apply to himself. He was known as the “Great Infidel,” and he certainly had no religious convictions at all.
One of the things I liked about the Mossner book is the use of extensive quotations from letters. You get a real flavour of not just Hume as a philosopher, but as a friend and sometimes as a witty, slightly barbative commentator on events and people around him. 
Yes, he had a very wide circle of correspondents and acquaintances — and of course they wrote letters to each other in those days and not emails — so we do have a very splendid archive of his correspondence. 
The next book is usually known by philosophers as The First Enquiry, but its full title is An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding.
This was written about a decade after the Treatise, and it was designed to make the doctrines of the Treatise — or at least the ones that by that time Hume found himself wedded to — more accessible. These are the doctrines of the first book of the Treatise, which is the book that concerns itself with metaphysics, epistemology and the nature of human understanding. The Treatise, in Hume’s famous phrase “fell dead born from the Press,” in other words it didn’t get the audience he had hoped for. So he recast important doctrines in the Enquiry. There’s some cost: some of the really difficult and intriguing doctrines of the Treatise get lost or very much suppressed, but at the same time it is a much more accessible and readable book.
This idea of rewriting your earlier work, simply because it wasn’t well enough received, is quite unusual for a philosopher. You won’t find Immanuel Kant writing a simpler version of theCritique of Pure Reason because people found it hard to understand…
No, I think among great philosophers it’s almost unique. I can’t think of another case. Perhaps you could see Berkeley’s Three Dialogues as a kind of recasting of his Principles, that’s the nearest case I can think of.
So he clearly was someone who wanted to speak to a wider audience, he wasn’t just content to write for a very small group of philosophers.
He felt he had something important to say, particularly as regards skepticism about religion. He was anxious to get it out, to enable people to appreciate both the scope and the limits of human reason — and therefore to avoid dogmatism. In that respect he was a follower of John Locke, and arguably Berkeley himself. The 17th and 18th centuries were preoccupied with the idea that if we had a proper understanding of human nature, we’d have a proper account of human understanding and of its limits. That was very important to him, and to Locke for that matter.
Some of the key ideas in the Enquiry focus on how little we actually know. This is a dominant theme in philosophy from Socrates onwards — we think we know a lot, but actually a lot of things we take for granted aren’t quite what they seem…
That’s right. The doctrine that eventually emerges is called “mitigated skepticism” by Hume. He never had any time for exaggerated skepticism — the kind that led Descartes to worry about whether he might be dreaming all the time. But Hume did think that overconfidence and dogmatism led to intolerance, to faction, to a lot of the crimes of human history. So if you could show, in a decisive way, where our limits lie, we could improve on that abysmal history.
One of the disconcerting revelations of the book is what’s come to be known as “the problem of induction.”
Yes this was perhaps Hume’s first great — it’s always dangerous in philosophy to say — discovery. I think other people had been aware of problems of induction before Hume, but there’s no doubt he put the matter in the classic way. What he finds is that the confidence we have in natural law — in the regularities and uniformity of nature, in the future being about to resemble the past — has a source in our animal nature. Animals too expect things to go on much as they have gone on — but it has no justification in reason. There is no a priori way of showing that it’s even probable that the future will resemble the past.
So just because the sun rose this morning, doesn’t mean it will tomorrow.
Absolutely. There’s nothing available to our understanding to show us why things must keep on as they apparently always have.
That idea, that this expectation is something in our psychology, is something he continues throughout the Enquiry.
Very much so. This is one of the perpetual drumbeats in Hume. The message that he is constantly reinforcing is that we have to work with human nature, as we’ve got it. There’s no point in trying to kick it over. Exaggerated scepticism tries to kick it over and that’s just not going to work. It’s not going to be a possible way of living for human beings. So we have to follow nature, but at the same time, we shouldn’t think we thereby get more insight, more justification in reason, than is afforded by the proposition that, "That’s the way we are, that’s how we think about things.”
I love the way he says, “Be a philosopher; but amidst all your philosophy, be still a man.” As human beings, you can’t deny the existence of our propensities to believe certain sorts of things.
That’s exactly it.
One of the areas where that was controversial for him was his analysis of people’s propensity to believe that miracles have happened.
This becomes rather difficult. The famous section X of the First Enquiry on miracles is this wonderful epistemological argument that it can never be reasonable to believe in a report of a miracle, because the probability that human testimony is letting us down is always greater than the probability of a miracle having occurred. So if someone comes to you with a report of a putative miracle — flying pigs were seen in Cambridge today — the right response is always going to be to worry about how on earth this report got going, not whether there were flying pigs in Cambridge.
Why?
Because, in effect, the miracle monger, the person who is giving you a report of a miracle, faces a bind. They’ve got to take on something which is antecedently as improbable as it could possibly be, otherwise they would just say it was a rare event. So if I tell you that three horses ran neck-to-neck in the Grand National, well that’s not very common or possibly very likely. But if I tell you that one of them then beat the other by flying through the air, that’s not just unlikely, it’s a miracle — it’s clean contrary to everything we believe about nature.
So, in a sense, it relies on this notion that there are laws of nature which are extremely likely to be true, that have a large amount of evidence in support of them, and a miracle is, by definition — or at least Hume’s definition — something that transgresses those alleged laws of nature.
Yes, so there’s a certain amount of muddiness about the overall picture that Hume is offering. It does seem as though the argument against miracles requires some confidence in probabilities, and then of course you might ask, “Where does that confidence come from if reason is silent? Surely it’s silent about probabilities as well?” So there is a difficulty adjusting the chapter on miracles to the overall philosophy of induction and science. 
Now in the Enquiry there is also an attack on what is sometimes known as the “Argument from Design,” the idea that you can prove God’s existence empirically by looking at the evidence of a designer around you. That’s something that carries through into your next book, Hume’s Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion. He’s on much stronger ground in his refutation there, there aren’t many weaknesses, to my mind, in his argument. Can you say something about the Dialogues?
The great thing about the Dialogues is the attack on the argument of design, it’s usually taken to be the decisive destruction of that argument. There are many, many strands to it. Part of the beauty of theDialogues — and one thing that makes it a very funny book apart from anything else — is that Hume gives us two spokesmen for religious belief. One of them, a guy called Cleanthes, is the spokesman for the argument from design. The other one, a chap called Demea, is probably modelled on Leibniz or on 17th century rationalism. He thinks there’s a mathematical or quasi-mathematical logical proof of the existence of God. In Cleanthes’s hands, the argument from design is presented like a piece of science. Just as if you find the cheese has been eaten, you might suppose that the best explanation is that there is a mouse about, so if you find order and beauty and complexity in nature, the best explanation is that it was designed by a splendid intelligence of some kind and that we call God. So Cleanthes is offering us a quasi piece of science. Demea is offering us a quasi piece of mathematics or logic. The humour of the Dialogues consists in setting these two at each other’s throats. So by the end Demea has said that Cleanthes is little better than an anthropomorphite — that he can’t know whether God is single or many, whether the world is designed by a committee or by an infant deity who is an object of derision to his superiors, or by a superannuated old deity who has since died. In other words, all these things that are common to human beings become possible attributes of God. So Demea says Cleanthes is little better than an atheist, and Cleanthes turns around and says Demea is little better than an atheist, because his mathematician’s God is beyond understanding. It has no attributes we can make sense of. So each of them is sceptical about the other. Meanwhile the actual sceptic in the Dialogues, Philo — who most people, and I myself, think is Hume — just has to sit back and watch these two tearing each other apart.
What’s interesting is that philosophy more or less began with dialogues — if you think of Plato as the starting point of philosophy as we know it — and yet there have been so few successful dialogues written since.
That’s right, there are very few. Berkeley’s Three Dialogues is perhaps the only other wholly successful example since Plato. One might mention Galileo’s Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems, although that’s more about physics and astronomy. It’s very rare, and it’s even more rare for it to be pulled off successfully.
One of the reasons he pulls it off so successfully is that he deliberately strengthens the arguments of each participant so that he doesn’t have easy or soft targets.
Exactly, that’s something that makes the Platonic Dialogues slightly iffy to some of us, the way the patsies just fall over and say “Gosh you’re so right, Socrates,” at the point you want to say, “No, dig your heels in! He’s not right!”
The other reason I think it’s so successful is that he’s got such a creative imagination when it comes to examples, they’re so beautifully constructed with such clever images. The one that sticks with me is about the books.
Yes, that’s right. Cleanthes says that the whole world is a kind of library, and you can read the Creator’s mind in it. This is a point at which Demea gets hot under the collar and says “No, God is too mysterious! When we read a book we enter into the mind of the author, but we can’t know the mind of God in that intimate way.” So that’s a point at which Demea rebels against Cleanthes, and in fact does the sceptic’s work for him.
Hume worked on this book throughout his life, I believe, but didn’t publish it during his lifetime.
Some of the central ideas were put in very pithy form in section XI of the First Enquiry, so that’s as early as 1749 or so. But he goes on revising the Dialogues and adding to them almost until his death in 1776. It was more than 35 years in the making.
Why was that? Presumably because it still wasn’t a good time to publish works that were critical of religious views?
It’s a good question. I’m not completely convinced by any of the explanations I’ve heard. It’s certain he had friends amongst the moderate party in the Church of Scotland, and he might have been cautious about offending them. But he’d already published a chapter on miracles, and the gist of the arguments of the Dialogues in section XI of the First Enquiry. He then published quite inflammatory essays on suicide and immortality. It’s not plain that the Dialogues are more inflammatory than anything else that he was quite happy to have published.
It may be that by the 1760s — the last decade or so of his life — he’d become less interested in presenting the arguments on natural religion. Natural religion is considering religion as a doctrine: these are the arguments for it, arguments independent of revelation, and those he destroys. But he’s also very interested in religion as a natural phenomenon that is part of the biography of human beings. He wrote a shorter book on that, The Natural History of Religion, which really considers religion as a kind of psychological or social phenomenon. That is the ancestor of writers like Durkheim who are anthropologists who have looked at the functional role that religions play.
Yes, we see Hume as a philosopher, but his contemporaries saw him as a historian.
Exactly. The naturalism we’ll come on to because it’s very much emphasized in the book by Norman Kemp-Smith, who gives him a kind of proto-anthropological, proto-psychological/sociological interest in the way human beings behave.
That’s presumably part of what makes Hume so attractive - he wasn’t just a narrow, academic specialist. He was someone who was genuinely interested by humanity in every aspect of our understanding: the past of human beings, why we are as we are, why we fall into certain patterns of behaviour and thinking.
Yes, he was very interested in all that, and in a sense his whole philosophy can be seen as an unravelling of such constancies as there are in human nature, both in connection with the ways we think, the categories we think with and also in connection with our ethics, which he also wrote extensively on. 
So let’s turn to Norman Kemp-Smith’s commentary on Hume’s writing, The Philosophy of David Hume. I was really intrigued by your choice here, because Norman Kemp-Smith was a Victorian, he was born in the late 19th century. It’s not the latest piece of commentary on Hume that you’ve chosen here…
It’s not, and in some respects, Kemp-Smith has been superseded. But he gets an awful lot right, and he effected a sea-change in people’s understanding of Hume. I think it’s fair to say that the dominant idea before Kemp-Smith is that Hume was a sceptic, he didn’t allow that we know anything.
In the Cartesian sense?

Yes. A number of commentators in his own time, most notoriously James Beattie and Thomas Reid, had pegged Hume as the person who drove empiricism to its sceptical limit and thereby basically reduced it to absurdity. Because we’re not allowed to believe anything, we’re left in the position of the Pyrrhonian skeptic, after Pyrrho of Elis, who is supposed not to have been confident of anything, including whether he was sitting down or standing up or was in a room or outdoors. And of course that way madness lies... So the Reid-Beattie interpretation was quite dominant in the Victorian period and in early 20th century commentary. It took Norman Kemp-Smith to rescue Hume from that, and point out that no, Hume is not an opponent of natural belief. He is a naturalist. He’s interested in the mechanisms of the mind that lead to natural belief.
What is a naturalist exactly? The common connotation is of somebody who goes out and watches chimpanzees in their natural habitat…
Well, in a sense, that’s exactly what Hume does. He watches human beings in their natural habitat. Of course he wasn’t a field anthropologist, but he had his books: he was a historian and knew a great deal about how human beings behave and the kind of systems they form for themselves and so on. So you can see him as intensely interested in human nature, in the nature of the human motivational system, in the nature of our cognitive systems, and that makes him the granddaddy of an awful lot of sciences of man.
He’s also thought of as a great Enlightenment figure, but the caricature of the Enlightenment is that it put all the weight on human reason: reason is the light that is shone into the darkness.
Yes, it’s a very back-handed compliment to Hume, because he was very doubtful about the powers of human reason. One’s got to be careful here, reasonable is a term of praise, and Hume uses it as such. He doesn’t doubt that there are better and worse ways of conducting our intellectual lives or conducting our scientific enquiries. He’s firmly on the side of the better ways of doing that. But he’s an opponent of the scholastic, quasi-mathematical, logical powers of the mind. Those powers he diminishes. What comes in to take their place is the doctrine of natural belief, of the way our psychologies will end up distributing confidence in things.
And it’s not just the abstract reasoning that he’s interested in, but also what motivates us to do anything.
Very much so. The second book of the Treatise was basically entirely about human motivation, leading onto the third book which is about ethics and to some extent politics as well. The mechanisms of the mind he’s interested in are the ones that have direct motivational efficacy.
There’s a suggestion that reason is always the slave of the passions?
Yes, that’s the famous provocative remark, “and has no other office but to serve and obey them.” There’s an insight there which is picked up in much modern philosophy, and it is of course the insight of pragmatism, that success in action is, in some sense, the mother of thought. It’s because we need our actions in the world to serve our needs and to generate success, that we have the intelligences we do. That’s the nutshell idea of modern American pragmatism, and the pragmatist tradition. 
You’ve chosen a book by Kant as your fifth book. Why did you do that, why the Critique of Pure Reason?
It’s an illuminating way to think of the Critique, as a kind of prolonged wrestling match with Hume. Kant recognizes the challenge Hume poses to human reason, and he tries to show that reason can meet that challenge, that there are proper ways of thinking, correct ways of thinking, there are correct categories of thought, and these have a kind of logical or a priori command over any thought, not just human thought. So instead of human nature, we’re going to get unalterable structures which any reasoning creature would have to be following. For example, in Hume, if, let’s say, human beings came across Martians, there’d be no particular reason to expect the Martians to think in the same way that we do. For Kant, there would. If the Martians think of themselves as individuals inhabiting an extended spatial and temporal world, they’ll have to think like that. They will share a lot of common categories with us: categories like causation, substance, space, time and so on.
Hume’s empiricism involves him assuming that experience is what gives us most of our information about the world. Is it fair to say that, in contrast, Kant is saying that from an analysis of the way we organize the world, it follows that there must be this logical structure to our thought?
That’s right, that’s basically the element that Kant wheels out to try to diminish the scepticism about reason that we’ve been talking about, and to put in its place a kind of guarantee: first of all that there will be uniformity in nature and secondly that we’re right to think of nature in terms of causation, space, time and whatever other structures he can dig out.
Is Kant explicit about Hume as the stimulus for the book?
Yes, he says it’s Hume who awoke him from his dogmatic slumbers. He pays the most generous tribute to Hume. He’s also very scathing about Reid and Beattie, who he thinks totally failed to understand Hume. They totally failed to see that Hume is not attacking natural belief. He’s in favour of our natural belief systems, but he’s attacking their foundation in reason. That’s what Kant sets about trying to supply.
Kant was a Christian, Hume was at least an agnostic. Was there any tension there? Some people talk about Hume as if he were a proto-Richard Dawkins, but he wasn’t quite that…
This is very interesting. The key text here is the final section of the Dialogues, section XII. As we’ve been discussing, in most of the Dialogues Hume absolutely destroys the argument from design. But then, in the final section, he turns around, apparently very concessive, and says “Look really the whole issue is just verbal. The theist thinks that the ultimate cause of the universe bears some relation to human intelligence, why should we deny that? Maybe it does. It probably bears some relationship to other processes of nature and human intelligence is just one of those, so let’s not make a meal of this.” This all seems terribly soggy. Just at the point where Philo seems to have won hands down, he turns around and says, “There’s not really much of an issue here.” That of course would anger someone like Richard Dawkins enormously. The greatness of Hume is apparent here. He was a very economical thinker. He doesn’t ever try to prove more than he wants. At this point, what he’s interested in is that there are no implications for practice. He’s reduced what our natural reasoning powers can deliver about God or the ultimate causes of things to the point where we can’t draw any implications for how to behave, who to worship, what kind of doctrines or beliefs to hold. We’re reduced, in effect, to a kind of silence. That is quite congenial to some religious thinkers, but to Hume, it matters enormously, because all the wars and the dogmas and the legal systems which are founded with the alleged authority of religion, in turn, are just creations spun out of our own heads. They’ve got no real foundation in anything else than the cultural habits that their authors bring to the issues. So if you find a religious text telling you that homosexuality is a bad thing, well that text is written by someone and he brought to it his ethics, and he takes out of it his ethics. So, in a nutshell, as I like to put it, Hume’s position is you can’t check out of Hotel Supernatural with any more baggage than you took into it. That’s a very important discovery. It means that arguing about the existence of God becomes kind of pointless. What you should argue about is the implications people think they can draw from it.
Is Hume your favourite philosopher?
Yes. I think Hume along with Wittgenstein. My third would be Aristotle, who also deserves lots of credit for his association of the investigation of human nature with the whole investigation of nature. Fourth would be Kant. I think I have to put Kant in over Plato.
Interview by: Nigel Warburton
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...The Four Essays as “Medicine of the Mind” We can now see how Hume expects the four essays to work. In the Enquiry Hume tells us that one of the techniques by which easy writing accomplishes its purpose is by placing opposite characters in a proper contrast (E 5). This is an accurate description of the four essays, where four opposite characters are contrasted. By working through the exercise of contrasting these opposite characters, our passions will become softened and regulated. Seeing different approaches, each described in Volume XV Number 2 319 JOHN IMMERWAHR a sympathetic way, will widenour view and moderate our own passion. The primary function of the essays is not only to articulate a theory of happiness, but to moderate our passions by making us think about happiness in a certain way. Seen in this light, Hume’s strategy in the four essays on happiness is analogous to what he does in some of the more political pieces in the Essays and in the History of England. What Hume frequently tries to do in his political and historical writings is to show both sides of the issue and by so doing enhance the spirit of moderation and calmness in his reader. In another one of the Essays, ‘That Politics may be reduced to a Science,” for example, Hume tries to cool partisan fervour by trying to get each side of the contemporary political debate to see the other’s point of view. Here too, in other words, he is trying to calm our passions by placing opposite characters in a proper contrast. The goal of this is moderation: There are enow of zealots on both sides who kindle up the passions of their partizans, and under pretence ofpublicgood, pursue the interests and ends of their particular faction. For my part, I shall always be more fond ofpromoting maderation than zeal?’ In fact, Hume’s sympathies are probably closest to the Sceptic, but the question of which of the four essays has the correct view of human happiness is secondary to their function as an exercise to produce moderation. Indeed, in a later letter Hume implies that following any of these approaches would be superior to superstition and bigotry. He aligns himself with the view of the ancients that a follower of any of these sects would display more Regularity in his Lifi and Manners, than ... the ignorant & illiter~te.~~ Any of these four positions, then, would be more moderate than what we usually find in the world, and the regimen of comparing all four will even further enhance moderation. The four essays thus have a different goal from that of the Treatise. Reading them is intended to be a salutary intellectual exercise. The reader must work through four theories, each of which is attractive and moderate, but which expresses opposite points of view. The result of this should be to produce a greater spirit of moderation in the reader. The reader will move from dogmatism and its attendant violent as sions to a more sceptical view, with its attendant calm passions. 32 - 320 Hume Studies HUME’S ESSAYS ON HAPPINESS Conclusion This reading of the essays suggests a somewhat different relation between Hume’s abstruse works (such as the Treatise) and his more popular essays (such as the essays on happiness). We know from Hume’s letters that during the years when he was projecting and writing the Treatise he was preoccupied by questions about human happiness. The Hellenistic search for happiness was, for Hume, a Subject Z think much We might therefore expect the Treatise to include an extended discussion ofhuman happiness and the means to achieve it. Although Hume deals with virtue at some length, there is very little discussion ofhappiness. On the very last page of the Treatise, however, Hume tells us that this omission does not result from the inability of his system to tell us anything useful about this topic. On the contrary, he boasts that the same system may help us to form a just notion of the happiness ... of virtue (T 620). But Hume insists that the Treatise would not be an appropriate place for such a discussion, and tells us that we mustlook elsewhere for the answer to this question. Such reflections, he tells us, require a work a-part, very different from the genius of the present (T 620). Where in Hume’s works should we look for this promised discussion? If what I have said so far is correct, there are good reasons to believe that the work a-part that he refers to is precisely the Essays that he was just in the process of drafting. These four essays, as well as some of Hume’s other easy works, may thus be our source for Hume’s practical morality (T 621). To put it all another way, this interpretation suggests that by one standard, the popular essays are more important for Hume than the abstruse philosophical works. As Hume himself says, the technical works are subservient to the popular works (T 620). While the abstruse works provide the anatomy that undergirds the popular essays, it is the popular essays that actually have an impact on human life. Hume may not be completely ironic, in other words, when he tells us that popular philosophy rightly deserves the most dumble as well as the justest fame (E 7). Hume, in disagreement with the Sceptic, does believe that philosophy is the medicine of the mind (par. 28). It is, as he says in another of his essays, the sovereign antidote to the miseries caused by superstition and false religion?* But the abstruse philosophy, such as the Treatise, is only the necessary background to this therapeutic work. It is the popular essays that provide the cure.
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10.15.15. Th 15 - Reports continue: Dustin (TED), Shawn, Zach, & Lance "interview," Fadi, Kirulus, & Amir (Happy people);

13 comments:

  1. 5. Do acceptance, simple pleasures, perfectionism, and skepticism each have an important place in your personal pursuit of happiness? Which, if any, is more important?

    I think all play a role in my own happiness, but out of the four I would have to say that simple pleasures play the biggest role in my quest for happiness. And acceptance..because things happen and you have no choice but to accept.

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  2. Quiz Question:

    What is a naturalist, and how did this intrigue Hume?

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  3. Quiz Question:

    What did the Buddhist sage Nagasena liken the self to?

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  4. Discussion Question:

    Ally Ray-Smith's personal motto was "the only way to predict the future is to invent it." Is this true? Or are factors like destiny or genetics (depending on your viewpoints) too much to contend with? Can one hold this kind of carpe diem philosophy and also realize a Buddhist kind of peace?

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  5. 2. Are curiosity and experience enough to secure your happiness?

    Even if they do not manage it by themselves, these practices are likely to lead you to happiness you have not yet discovered or invigorate that happiness which you already have. Gopnik, for instance, became happier when she cultivated her random curiosity about Hume. It gave her a purpose. She furthered that happiness when that drive fueled by her curiosity led her to experience life even more fully--traveling, reading, and deepening or discovering personal relationships. However, while these things in themselves brought her happiness, she was ultimately guided by them to a more foundational, less transitory awareness and satisfaction in her own life.

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  6. - Is skepticism the most effective antidote to dogmatism and intolerance?

    I would think so. Those things are about fiercely engaging in ideas and acting upon them. To sit and ponder about them and be skeptical of them, even temporarily, can help one obtain a better grasp on what is true or not.

    - Do acceptance, simple pleasures, perfectionism, and skepticism each have an important place in your personal pursuit of happiness? Which, if any, is more important?

    Acceptance, simple pleasures, and skepticism are all key parts of the pursuit. Perfectionism comes in during key times, but must be put aside for certain occasions. If one leads a life expecting perfection all the time, they won't be leading happy lives. This is where acceptance comes into play.

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  7. 1. Comment: "Experience is enough all by itself. What do you lose when you give up God or “reality” or even “I”? The moon is still just as bright..."
    Experience is not enough all by itself. Without context involving why something is the way it is –why the moon is so bright or why the dish falls the same way each time- a major part of the marvel that is the universe is lost. As a kid, I thought a lot of things where interesting. As an adult, with the ability to understand how these things work and why they are important, my appreciation and aw have been magnified. Experience is not enough. Context is needed.
    2. Are curiosity and experience enough to secure your happiness?
    Experience, yes. Curiosity is close behind but not entirely necessary in every situation. Experience to be able to navigate a situation, in context, is a primary need for my personal happiness to cultivate a feeling of security.
    3. Is skepticism the most effective antidote to dogmatism and intolerance?
    Curiosity is more important because, without this, dogmatism and intolerance would never be questioned in the first place.
    4. Do you agree that "success in action is the mother of thought"? (What would a Taoist say?)
    A Taoist would dismiss this statement and argue that the way of the world defines everything and we are at a lack of control.
    5. Do acceptance, simple pleasures, perfectionism, and skepticism each have an important place in your personal pursuit of happiness? Which, if any, is more important?
    Yes, I would agree that they all do, in various degrees. Acceptance and simple pleasures are the most important and balance out the need for perfectionism (the personal downfall of my overall happiness).
    6. Is philosophy mainly a theoretical or a practical discipline?
    I believe it is viewed as both but is most needed and beneficial as a practical discipline. I do not see any personal need for theoretical philosophy and find it wasteful.

    Possible Quiz Questions:
    7. What model did Hume take up in his 20’s?
    8. What was Hume prescribed by doctors for his depression?
    9. What premise of Descartes did Hume reject?
    10. What religion did Gopnik find comparable to Hume’s writings?
    11. Who is Ippolito Desideri?
    12. Where did Hume live when he wrote the Treatise?
    13. What did Desideri attempt to convert the Indies to?
    14. Desideri sailed from Rome to India in ____.

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  8. "Is skepticism the most effective antidote to dogmatism and intolerance?"

    It certainly doesn't hurt. Even sitting down to really find the truth of something forces earnest consideration and keeps dogmatic faith from coalescing. Even if you arrive to the same conclusion after your deep thinking, dogmatism and intolerance have a far harder time setting in since you've delved in so far and, purposefully or not, hardened yourself against these things.

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  9. Do acceptance, simple pleasures, perfectionism, and skepticism each have an important place in your personal pursuit of happiness? Which, if any, is more important?

    In this order, acceptance, perfectionism, skepticism, and simple pleasures, I believe are important in my life. Acceptance of civil discourse, other people, ideas, and different cultures are necessary for the congeniality of society. We must accept differences to pursue the greater purpose. Perfectionism comes in second due to the reality of human nature, no one is perfect. However, we can conceive perfect ideas metaphysically to influence a more reflective environment of our ideals. Necessarily, Skepticism is second because each idea, object, thing requires a counter, a yang, to provide a greater understanding of the it. Lastly, simple pleasures are what they are, simple. We can focus on them, but how long do they illicit a return on value worth more than their degree of pleasure. If we can focus on the euphoric pleasures - values, ideals, institutions, purpose, the why - then we can achieve a greater insight to our life and its surroundings and products.

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  10. Comment: "Experience is enough all by itself. What do you lose when you give up God or “reality” or even “I”? The moon is still just as bright..."

    You lose hope, optimism, the belief of something bigger than yourself which allows you to sacrifice for something greater. Whatever greater thing you believe in, god, ideals, wealth, I think when an individual voids them self of intrinsic values they, in short, "sell out." Don't sell out, don't give in just because it is easy; we should foster, or at least, applaud delayed happiness/gratification for something greater.

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  11. "Experience is enough all by itself" resonates as another way of saying that being present is enough. Of course, living this way 24/7 is truly impossible because we are wired to predict and anticipate the future so that we can create a future for ourselves. there is a happy medium, and experience is enough by itself in the sense of we can find relief in the fact that if you & me and the entire human race were gone tomorrow, the waves would still be crashing and the moon would still be glowing. Or when I'm overwhelmed with sad emotions, I take gratitude in the fact that I'm experiencing these emotions at all. A rock feels no such depth

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  12. The question considering whether curiosity and experience is enough intrigues me because they represent two different perspectives in my opinion... Curiosity is tied in with the future while experience is tied in with the present so if you find a happy medium than yes these seem to be the recipe for happpppyyy

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  13. Extra questions for David Hume Quiz:
    1) When David Hume was 16 years old, what did he discovered?
    2) When did he get his doctorate degree? By what age?
    3) After he got his doctorate degree, what did he pursue?
    4) Where did he become professor? At what college?
    5) What was the important part of his life?
    6) How many kids did he had?
    7) How old was the oldest one that he mentioned?
    8) What was his happiest experience that he mentioned regarding his kids?
    9) Were children center of his life or was it his job?
    10) What happened when he felt in love?
    11) During his rough period, how many pounds did Hume lost?
    12) What religion was Hume interested all his life?
    13) What was the reason when doctors told him not to read so much?

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