Hume the Relation Fo the Treatise of Human Nature book I to the Inquiry Conc

Cover Hume the Relation Fo the Treatise of Human Nature book I to the Inquiry Conc
Hume the Relation Fo the Treatise of Human Nature book I to the Inquiry Conc
William Baird Elkin
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Concerning the question of the nature and classifi- cation of perceptions, it is evident that the position of the two works is practically the same. On all the more important topics there is perfect agreement. On minor points, of course, owing chiefly to omissions in the Inquiry, there are some differences observable. But these are differences of treatment, not of doctrine. Since the distinctions which were explicitly made, in the earlier work, are either reasserted, or implied in the later, th
...e omissions do not seem to have any significant bearing on Hume's philosophical position.
10. The Cause of Perceptions. The treatment of the cause of perceptions is rendered somewhat diffi- cult, owing to the ambiguity attaching to the word cause. True, it was one of Hume 's main contentions, one of the theses which he especially aimed to prove, that cause means only invariable antecedent. 1 ' ' Thus upon the whole we may infer, " he declares, 2 "that when we talk of any being, whether of a superior or inferior nature, as endowed with a power or force, proportioned to any effect ; when we speak of a neees- il, pp.


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