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    • Hume, David: Religion | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
      • He leveled moral, skeptical, and pragmatic objections against both popular religion and the religion of the philosophers. These run the gamut from highly specific topics, such as metaphysical absurdities entailed by the Real Presence of the Eucharist, to broad critiques like the impossibility of using theology to infer anything about the world.
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  2. Oct 4, 2005 · Hume leaves his readers with the clear view that religion, far from being a source of support for moral practice, is in fact a major source of moral sickness in the world. Hume returns to these same general themes in the closing passages of the Dialogues .

  3. Hume addressed most of the major issues within the philosophy of religion, and even today theists feel compelled to confront Hume’s challenges. He leveled moral, skeptical, and pragmatic objections against both popular religion and the religion of the philosophers.

  4. May 28, 2009 · Hume's critique of religion and religious belief is, as a whole, subtle, profound, and damaging to religion in ways that have no philosophical antecedents and few successors.

    • J. C. A. Gaskin
    • 1993
  5. Feb 26, 2001 · Generally regarded as one of the most important philosophers to write in English, David Hume (1711–1776) was also well known in his own time as an historian and essayist. A master stylist in any genre, his major philosophical works— A Treatise of Human Nature (1739–1740), the Enquiries concerning Human Understanding (1748) and concerning ...

  6. In sketching Hume's account of the origin of moral and religious ideas we shall suppress most of the details, but we shall try to give enough for our purpose. In Hume's moral theory the virtues, both natural and artificial ("artificial" is here completely nonpejorative), are based squarely on the passions, which present us with regular,

  7. Any analysis of Hume's writings on religion must begin with consideration of his moral theory.6 Like his fellow Scots, Francis Hutcheson and Adam Smith, Hume articulates a general theory moral sense or sentiment. According to Hume, reason alone is capable of serving as the foundation of morality.

  8. In the Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals, Hume develops his entire moral theory with utter disregard for religion. He does make an important statement about God in order to show that his moral theory is compatible with the existence of the God one finds in the argument from design (p. 294). Since God is the "cause" of

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