Everything about A Treatise Of Human Nature totally explained
A Treatise of Human Nature is a book by
Scottish philosopher
David Hume, first published in
1739–
1740.
The full title of the
Treatise is 'A Treatise of Human Nature: Being an Attempt to introduce the experimental Method of Reasoning into Moral Subjects'. It contains the following sections:
- Book 1: "Of the Understanding" - A treatment of everything from the origin of our ideas to how they're to be divided. Important statements of Scepticism.
- Book 2: "Of the Passions" - A treatment of emotions and free will.
- Book 3: "Of Morals" - A treatment of moral ideas, justice, obligations, benevolence.
Background
Hume wrote
A Treatise of Human Nature in
France at the age of twenty-six. Although many scholars today consider the
Treatise to be Hume's most important work and one of the most important books in the history of philosophy, the public in
Britain didn't at first agree. Hume himself described the (lack of) public reaction to the publication of the
Treatise by writing that the book "fell dead-born from the press."
Hume intended to see whether the
Treatise met with success and, if so, to complete it with books devoted to morals, politics, and criticism.
It didn't meet with success, and so wasn't completed.
After deciding that the
Treatise had problems of style rather than of content, he reworked some of the material for more popular consumption in
An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding (1748). It didn't prove extremely successful either, but more so than the
Treatise. He later also "cast anew" Book 3 of the
Treatise as
An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals (1751), which Hume wrote is "of all my writings, historical, philosophical, or literary, incomparably the best."
The
Treatise is now in the
public domain. Books 1 and 2 were originally published in 1739, while Book 3 was published in 1740.
Content
Of the Understanding
This book is a treatment of everything from the origin of our ideas to how they're to be divided. It includes important statements of Scepticism and Hume's experimental method. Part 1 deals with the nature of ideas. Part 2 deals with the ideas of space and time. Part 3 deals with knowledge and probability. Part 4 deals with skeptical and other systems of philosophy, including a discussion of the soul and personal identity.
The Nature of Ideas
In this part, first
David Hume divides all perception into ideas and impressions. He then argues that the simple impressions that come through the senses are the cause of their corresponding simple ideas, and from simple ideas forms complex ideas, either restricted to the same order of the corresponding complex impressions (which are memories) or re-arranged in a new form (which is imagination).
Descartes claimed that the only cause to the idea of God must be God himself, but according to hume God is a complex idea formed with simple idea caused by simlpe impressions, therefore the idea of God doesn't require God neither proves his existence.
Then Hume argues that general ideas are nothing but particular ideas attached to a certain word that gives it a wider application and makes it recall other individuals that are similar to it, for example we first see a particular man, then have an idea of this particular man, attach a word to this idea and then recall it when we see something similar (another man), Hume defends this view by 3 arguments one of them is that the mind can't think of a certain quality without the degree of that quality, such as a line without a length attached to it, hence all ideas must have their particular degrees of qualities therefore must be particular.
But if this was true, How then can the distinction of reason (Thinking of the shape of something only or its color only) be possible? According to Hume its through thinking of the resemblance of something with something else different in other aspects, for example we can consider the color of something only by thinking of the resemblance it has with something else of a different shape. Hume gives the example of a white marble globe and a black marble globe, one can think of the distinct shape by thinking of the resemblance between these two marble globes.
The Ideas of Space and Time
In this section, Hume first argues that our ideas and impressions of space and time aren't infintely divisible, one of the arguments is that the capacity of the mind is limited therefore it can't precieve an object with an infinite amount of parts, so it can't be infinitely divisible, the same for impressions and the proof is that if someone moves a piece of paper with a spot of ink on it until it disapears, the moment before it does, it represents the smallest indivisible impression.
Then Hume argues that space and time themselves aren't infinitely divisible, and the argument is that if time was
infinitely divisible there could be two moments coexisting which is against the difinition of time, there must be an indivisible part of time, and from the concept of motion the same can be said of space (Max Plank might have confirmed that the Plank size and the Plank time are the indivisible parts of space and time).
As Hume showed before, no simple idea can come before a simple impression, and applying this to space, what impression can cause the idea of space?
It must be an external idea according to Hume (unlike Kant who says the idea of space is given a priori), but the senses convey to us only colored points and rays of light, so the idea of extension is nothing but the copy of these colored points and the manner of their appearances.
The idea of time is derived from the succession of the two forms or perception, ideas and impressions (again unlike Kant who considered space and time conditions of experience and not derived from experience but given a priori), the argument for that's that we feel time flowing differently if our ideas and impressions flow in the mind differently.
Another argument for this is that the parts of time can never coexist so an unchanging object since it contains only coexistent impressions can never give us the notion of time, therefore time must be derived from changing objects, and can never be separated from the succession of them.
Hume then argues that if time can't be derived from an unchanging object therefore it can't be applied to such an object, the rest of this part is the answer to objections to Hume's views about space and time.
Of the Passions
This book is a treatment of emotions and free will. Part 1 deals with pride and humility. Part 2 deals with love and hatred. Part 3 deals with the will and direct passions.
Of Morals
This book is a treatment of moral ideas, justice, obligations, benevolence. Part 1 deals with virtue and vice in general. Part 2 deals with justice. Part 3 deals with other virtues, such as benevolence.
Further Information
Get more info on 'A Treatise Of Human Nature'.
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