I cannot agree that existence is absurd. I believe the empirical evidence clearly shows that life has purpose and meaning. I can't go into the reasons for this yet. I must finish my contra Hume papers first. — Ron Cram
You are an amusing conversationalist. I certainly hope the Amazon truck that runs you over is not delivering another load of books to my house. — Ron Cram
Hume never grasped this important distinction and Hume admitted that he never understood motion, force, power and energy. Indeed, these things cannot be understood until you understand the difference between primary and secondary qualities. The problem persists among the followers of Hume. None of them seem the slightest bit interested in understanding Hume's failures. — Ron Cram
But in general I'm personally less interested in a philosopher's failures than in his or her successes. — joshua
I might be wrong, but I have the sense that you aren't grasping the problem of induction, which means you are missing out on a real mindbender. — joshua
I once told a friend that I could go through Book 1 and put each of Hume's propositional statements in one or more of five categories:
1. Patently absurd
2. Demonstrably false
3. Self-contradictory
4. Intentionally obscure
5. Trivially true — Ron Cram
At the risk of being redundant, and assuming in good faith that this is to be interpreted as written, into which of these categories would put Hume's bundle theory of the self from Book 1 of the Treatise? — javra
It is a real natural law and it is never violated on cosmic scales and rarely on much smaller scales. — Ron Cram
If true, then Hume's bundle theory is demonstrably false. It is demonstrably false because objects actually exist and are "made of" something. — Ron Cram
If our perceptions only exist in our minds — Ron Cram
I have already claimed here the ability to prove the existence of an external world. — Ron Cram
I'm simply curious to find out how you think that Hume's bundle theory fails. — javra
Hey, my bad. I guess I should slow down a bit. You do understand that Hume's bundle theory of the self basically states that there is no such thing as a permanent, or immutable, self? I presumed you do on account that you've read Book 1 of the Treatise. — javra
But again, going at a slower pace, do you then presume that the something which objects are made of have a permanent, or immutable, core? — javra
Where else would our perceptions reside? — Echarmion
The problem is that unless and until there is at least an outline of this proof, your criticism of Hume sounds rather hollow. — Echarmion
[...] I provided Hume's quote saying that he understands that his theory of personal identity is not correct and that he cannot find a way to rescue it. — Ron Cram
Hume's bundle theory states that an objects consists of its properties and nothing more. — Ron Cram
No, all material objects are mutable. The substance objects are made of are well characterized. Take any object to a condensed matter physicist and they can tell you all about the substance and its properties. — Ron Cram
Yes, I recall that statement. What makes his bundle theory of the self imperfect is the presence of what some might term a unified first person point of view. Still, I can well argue that this imperfection does not in any way invalidate the claim that there is no permanent, immutable, aspect of the self. — javra
OK, I haven't read him in a very long time. Still, I don't recall him saying that "objects consist of its properties and nothing more". All I recall is his argument for the bundle theory of the self, in which he states that the self is a commonwealth of elements that constantly change. — javra
As to modern bundle theory, it does not deny substance, but presents the view, roughly speaking, that substance is composed of an aggregate of properties (such that properties can includes relations, which include causal relations.) The link I previously gave can serve as reference to this. — javra
Also, we are addressing substance within contexts of philosophy, not those of science. It makes for a world of difference. — javra
I don't think Hume ever claimed that individuals were immutable. — Ron Cram
I don't have a quote at my fingertips but the Wikipedia article on Bundle Theory, the one you linked above, has this quote:
"Thus, the theory asserts that the apple is no more than the collection of its properties. In particular, there is no substance in which the properties are inherent."
Wikipedia has it correctly. — Ron Cram
No, Hume's bundle theory of the self claims that there is no immutable self - which is what I've previously stated. — javra
"The bundle theory of substance explains compresence. Specifically, it maintains that properties' compresence itself engenders a substance. Thus, it determines substancehood empirically by the togetherness of properties rather than by a bare particular or by any other non-empirical underlying strata. The bundle theory of substance thus rejects the substance theories of Aristotle, Descartes, and more recently, J. P. Moreland, Jia Hou, Joseph Bridgman, Quentin Smith, and others." — javra
If our perceptions arise in our minds from unknown causes, as Hume argues, then a snowball that never melts on the equator would be possible. But if an external world actually exists, then it cannot. — Ron Cram
The bundle theory of substance thus rejects the substance theories of Aristotle, Descartes, and more recently, J. P. Moreland, Jia Hou, Joseph Bridgman, Quentin Smith, and others." — javra
This is not Hume's theory of substance. Notice that Hume's name does NOT appear in that list. — Ron Cram
You asked for a quote directly from the Treatise. Here's a quote from 1.1.6: — Ron Cram
Why not? Because it's not the sort of thing that has happened so far? — joshua
And what do we know about H2OH2O that isn't based on our past experience? Our entire theory of molecules, atoms, and sub-atomic particles is a codification of the patterns we have found to hold so far (or since we've been checking.) [If someone did observe a violation, we probably wouldn't believe, them, though.] So saying that the snowball must melt because the electron must do X etc. only shifts the issue to electrons. Why should electrons continue to behave as they have? — joshua
I am not a Hume expert, i'm just a googler. But doesn't this defence of Hume miss the point, or at least fail to stress the epistemological target of Hume's argument? — sime
So assuming Hume was a good philosopher, his concepts of resemblance and constant-conjunction must have been mental concepts referring to the mentalistic interpretation of knowledge, where they make sense. For instance, in our modern world of virtual reality it might be the case that we instinctively avoid virtual fire as we might also instinctively avoid virtual spiders and virtual snakes, even though we consciously appreciate, via resemblence and constant-conjunction, that these virtual entities are likely to be harmless. — sime
Can you provide any reference to Hume being a "skeptical idealist"? Or else one that critiques Hume as "doubting the existence of an external world"? Fallible though I am, these complaints seem idiosyncratic. — javra
Because of cause and effect due to physical necessity. Each step in the process is well understood. It is like the physical necessity of one billiard ball forcing another billiard ball to move. It can be clearly observed. — Ron Cram
That we all 'project' necessary connection or physical necessity is not in dispute. Our minds seem built to do just that. The point is that this is so automatic that even understanding the problem of induction is difficult. It's not only conceptually difficult (but it's too 'close' to us), but it's also difficult in terms of motivation. — joshua
In my guts I believe in the 'laws' of nature, even though I can see that such 'laws' are merely 'irrational' expectations. — joshua
If the law was not real, and was only a matter of our imagination as Hume says, then we could not reliably engineer battleships to float. — Ron Cram
https://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/philo/courses/modern05/Hume_on_empirical_reasoning.pdfThe uniformity of nature is the principle that the course of nature continues uniformly
the same, e.g. if X is the cause Y, then Y will necessarily exist whenever X exists. In particular,
the uniformities observed in the past will hold for the present and future as well. Hume’s query
in Inquiry IV/ii is whether our belief in this principle is founded on reason or not.
After rejecting the notion that its certainty derives from demonstrative reason (because
there is no contradiction in the thought that nature does not continue uniformly the same), Hume asks whether it can be supposed to rest on probable (i.e. empirical) reason. He argues that this assumption leads us into a vicious circle, and therefore must be false... — paper
But the problem is this move from 'battleships have floated' to 'battleships will float.' — joshua
In particular, the uniformities observed in the past will hold for the present and future as well. Hume’s query in Inquiry IV/ii is whether our belief in this principle is founded on reason or not. — paper
No. It isn't that "battleships will float" as if battleships suddenly appear out of the blue, but we know how to make battleships float because we discovered the law of floatation. Why pretend that we don't know the things we know with certainty? What makes you think there is any value to humanity in that? — Ron Cram
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