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Resemblance, contiguity, and cause and effect
- Hume said that the production of thoughts in the mind is guided by three principles: resemblance, contiguity, and cause and effect. Thus, people who think of one idea are likely to think of another idea that resembles it; their thought is likely to run from red to pink to white or from dog to wolf to coyote.
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Feb 26, 2001 · Without sympathy, and the associative principles that explain it, we would be unimaginably different than we are—creatures without causal or moral ideas. Hume develops his account of moral evaluation further in response to two objections to his claim that the moral sentiments arise from sympathy.
- Problem of Induction
Hume worked with a picture, widespread in the early modern...
- Problem of Induction
His first major work, A Treatise of Human Nature (1739–40), explains the origin of ideas, including the ideas of space, time, and causality, in sense experience; presents an elaborate account of the affective, or emotional, aspects of the mind and assigns a subordinate role to reason in this order (“Reason is, and ought only to be, the ...
Jul 1, 2014 · Accordingly, Humean theory of ideas is best understood as a purely psychological program concerned with objects only insofar as they are ideas present to consciousness capable of influencing the understanding, passions, and morals of the individual isolated mind.
3 days ago · Hume recognized two kinds of perception: “impressions” and “ideas.” Impressions are perceptions that the mind experiences with the “most force and violence,” and ideas are the “faint images” of impressions.
Mar 21, 2018 · Hume worked with a picture, widespread in the early modern period, in which the mind was populated with mental entities called “ideas”. Hume thought that ultimately all our ideas could be traced back to the “impressions” of sense experience.
Feb 26, 2001 · The most important philosopher ever to write in English, David Hume (1711-1776) — the last of the great triumvirate of “British empiricists” — was also well-known in his own time as an historian and essayist. A master stylist in any genre, Hume's major philosophical works — A Treatise of Human Nature (1739-1740), the Enquiries ...
Hume essentially follows Locke’s empiricism, but proposes a terminological improvement in distinguishing Lockean “Ideas” into the two categories of “ideas” (i.e. components of our thought) and “impressions” (i.e. sensations or feelings).4 He then expresses the empiricist claim in terms of our ideas being copies of our impressions – apparently s...