Tuesday, April 24, 2012

David Hume and Epistemology

an intro to Hume...

24 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hume died from cancer of the colon on August 25th, 1776 in Edinburgh.

Anonymous said...

He change the spelling of his name from Home to Hume because Home was pronounced Hume in Scotland.

Anonymous said...

Apologies for the avatar, it's a running joke on my internet alias. :P

Lily Quarton-Parsons said...

he was never married in his life

Saxon said...

no need to apologise, Tom... it's a great avatar...

Unknown said...

He spent four years in Anjou, France

Unknown said...

He had two nicknames, 'Le bon David' in France and 'Saint David' in Scotland.

Unknown said...

Hume didnt like his professor while he was studying law and said "There is nothing to learnt by a professor, which is not to be met with in books".

Unknown said...
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Unknown said...

Hume's father, Joseph Hume, was a descendant of the noble house of Home Douglas.

Ailis McC said...

He attended university at the age of 12.

Florentino said...

Hume's first book "A Treatise of Human Nature" was published in 1739, he was 28 at the time.

Unknown said...

In 1742 Hume wright his second volume essay moral and politics as his first book was failing people started saying he was leaving philosophy for economic and politics for literary fame

Unknown said...

Hume attended the University of Edinburgh.

Megan Marden said...

shares the same birthday as ms.dynamite who performed for college in June.

Connor Flello said...

Hume rejected all methods of inference other than deduction within the realm of mathematics. No processing of "data" would justify the existence of cause an effect or even future expectation to Hume. Hume specifically asserts that no number of sun rises logically entails its rising the next morning or even justifies and expectation that it will.

Unknown said...

It is often said that Hume abandoned philosophy for economics and politics in search of literary fame.

oliver carver said...

The Church of Scotland seriously considered bringing charges of infidelity against him.

Unknown said...

Hume was extremely good at knowing when people were lying, and tried to scare people with his vast knowledge. This is why nobody liked him.

Unknown said...

David Hume had an IQ of 180

Linzerbicci said...
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Linzerbicci said...

Heavily influenced others such as Kant who wrote: "Hume has awakened me from my doctrinal slumbers". - Lindsay

anthonehh said...

He had a friend who once chalked "St David's Street" onto the side of the house in which he lived during his later years. The street ended up keeping this name.

Unknown said...

Adam Smith described him as “approaching as near to the ideal of a perfectly wise and virtuous man as human frailty will admit.”