Day 7: 1st Half, Test 2;
            2nd Half, Rationalism, Empiricism, & Intro to Hume

•           Rationalists and Empiricists

•           Kinds of Human Inquiry

•           Cause and Effect

•           Please read Enquiry, sections V, VI, VII; and Treatise, Bk II, Part III, sections I & II

 

Rationalists and Empiricists

•           Who were the rationalists?  Roughly, people characterized by the following:

–      Significant role for a priori knowledge

–      Emphasis on necessary truths

–      Significant role for innate knowledge

•           Empiricists were inclined to deny the above

 

Rationalists and Empiricists

•           Some philosophers generally regarded as rationalists: Descartes (1596- 1650), Spinoza (1632-1677), and Leibniz (1646-1716)

•           Some philosophers generally regarded as empiricists: Locke (1632-1704), Berkeley (1685-1753), and Hume (1711-1776)

 

Kinds of Human Inquiry

•           What are the two types of human inquiry Hume identifies?

•           What characterizes these different types of inquiry?

 

Cause and Effect

•           What are reasonings concerning matters of fact based on?

•           Does Hume think that cause and effect reasoning can be understood a priori?

•           Some quotes

•           The difference between induction and cause and effect

 

Skeptical Doubts Regarding Matters of Fact

•            1: All reasoning regarding induction and cause and effect makes use of

    F – the future will resemble the past.

•            2: To prove F, one must reason to a matter of fact;

•            3: Any reasoning to a matter of fact invokes F; therefore,

•            4: Any proof of F is circular and unconvincing.

•            5: Any justification or proof of induction and cause and effect requires a justification or proof of F; therefore,

•            6: No proof or justification of induction or cause and effect can be given that is non-circular and convincing.

 

More Skeptical Doubts & a Response

•           The argument from our inability to spot necessary connections.

•           What is Hume’s account of induction and cause and effect?