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David HumeA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
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At the time that Hume was writing, the intellectual world had been in upheaval for some time. Political and philosophical commitments were shifting rapidly. The works of the mathematician, philosopher, and metaphysician René Descartes had been circulating for the better part of half a century. The Enlightenment, which prevailed in Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries, was in full swing. The Enlightenment centered around the elevation of reason over faith and superstition. The Scottish Enlightenment, of which Hume is considered a founding personage, was centered largely in Edinburgh where Hume lived and worked. It entailed the rapid development of and investigation into new sciences and fields of knowledge. Hume based a large part of his philosophical system on the emerging consensus in parts of academia that all phenomena have purely material causes.
In Scotland—where Hume lived—the Enlightenment movement disagreed with many tenets of Scottish Presbyterianism and Calvinism. This in large part inspired Hume’s concern with miracles and the question of God in relation to human action and morals. It explains why his work and reputation were considered to be outside the mainstream at the start of his career.
At the time that Hume wrote it, An Enquiry… was not particularly famous or influential. Most people thought little of Hume and his work. Many considered him to be a rather unimportant skeptic, but today his work is considered among the most important in the history of philosophical inquiry. Eventually, Hume would go on to be an important influence and foil for Immanuel Kant, another influential philosopher and writer.
The text of An Enquiry… is based on the posthumous edition published in its final form after Hume’s death in 1776. While its interpretation has been debated ever since it was written, it has had a major influence on philosophical thought for well over 200 years.
Hume starts by referencing the science of moral philosophy and the manner in which human activity and human understanding can be investigated. A common theme in the text, and Hume’s approach in general, is to critique the ancient philosophers and the perspective they took toward humanity and the capacity and scope of human reason. Hume sets his work in opposition to theirs; he is much more skeptical of human capacity to know things like the existence of God and rejects the existence of miracles and the supernatural.
By David Hume