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Title: A Treatise of Human Nature Being an Attempt to Introduce the
Experimental Method into Moral Subjects
Author: David Hume
Thomas Hill Green
Editor: Thomas Hodge Grose
Language: English
A Treatise of Human Nature (1739£¿40) is a book by Scottish philosopher David Hume, considered by many to be Hume's most important work and one of the most influential works in the history of philosophy.[1] The Treatise is a classic statement of philosophical empiricism, skepticism, and naturalism. In the introduction Hume presents the idea of placing all science and philosophy on a novel foundation: namely, an empirical investigation into human nature. Impressed by Isaac Newton's achievements in the physical sciences, Hume sought to introduce the same experimental method of reasoning into the study of human psychology, with the aim of discovering the "extent and force of human understanding". Against the philosophical rationalists, Hume argues that the passions, rather than reason, govern human behaviour. He introduces the famous problem of induction, arguing that inductive reasoning and our beliefs regarding cause and effect cannot be justified by reason; instead, our faith in induction and causation is the result of mental habit and custom. Hume defends a sentimentalist account of morality, arguing that ethics is based on sentiment and the passions rather than reason, and famously declaring that "reason is, and ought only to be the slave to the passions". Hume also offers a skeptical theory of personal identity and a compatibilist account of free will.
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SUMMARY OF THE CONTENTS
of the
GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO VOL. I
1. How the history of philosophy should be studied. -
345. Possibility of such fictitious ideas implies refutation of Hume¡¯s doctrine.
SUMMARY OF THE CONTENTS
of the
GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO VOL. II.
1. Hume¡¯s doctrine of morals parallel to his doctrine of nature. -
64. Only respectability remains: and even this not consistently accounted for.
ÈâÀÇ ¿ø·¡Ã¥ ¸ñÂ÷.Contents
1 Content 1.1 Introduction
1.2 Book 1: Of the Understanding 1.2.1 Part 1: Of ideas, their origin, composition, connexion, abstraction, etc.
1.2.2 Part 2: Of the ideas of space and time
1.2.3 Part 3: Of knowledge and probability 1.2.3.1 Sections 1£¿3
1.2.4 Part 4: Of the skeptical and other systems of philosophy 1.2.4.1 Sections 1£¿2
1.3 Book 2: Of the Passions 1.3.1 Part 1: Of pride and humility 1.3.1.1 Sections 1£¿6
1.3.2 Part 2: Of love and hatred 1.3.2.1 Sections 1£¿3
1.3.3 Part 3: Of the will and direct passions 1.3.3.1 Sections 1£¿2
1.4 Book 3: Of Morals 1.4.1 Part 1: Of virtue and vice in general
1.4.2 Part 2: Of justice and injustice 1.4.2.1 Sections 1£¿2
1.4.3 Part 3: Of the other virtues and vices 1.4.3.1 Section 1
Introductions to Books I and II of
David Hume¡¯s Treatise of Human Nature
Thomas Hill Green
A Treatise of Human Nature, being an attempt to introduce
the Experimental Method of Reasoning into Moral Subjects
and Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion
by David Hume,
Edited, with preliminary dissertation and Notes
, by T.H. Green and T.H. Grose
London, Longmans Green & Co, 1874