James's working notes from Western Civ class

Table of Contents

Intuition

HumeHume
David Hume

Wrote Hume, Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding
Wrote a History of England

Bkgrd Info

1711-1776
Scottish
studied law at 15, did not like it
self-taught in philosophy
published "Treatise of Human Understanding" at age 28

thought it would make him a rock star like Newton.
received little attention
ReidReid
Thomas Reid
Reid, Inquiry & Essays

Bkgrd info (copied fr. Kate)

important figure in the Scottish Enlightenment (18th century)
Presbyterian Minister
age 16, MA from University of Aberdeen
age 21, licensed preacher for Church of Scotland
age 27, entered Ministry
age 54, wrote Inquiry into the Human Mind
he was called to the University of Glasgow to replace Adam Smith as Professor of Moral Philosophy
Common sense = “The most important use of the term “common sense” in R...
& KantKant
Kant
Wrote Kant, What is Enlightenment?
Man's primary problem isn't sin; it's that he doesn't have the freedom to reason & be enlightened (??)

Background

came from Prussia, wrote under Frederick the Great
Kant - a rationalist who wants to confine reason to the bounds of experience

reason is bound by the condition of possible experience; cannot reason about unexperienced things
so, we can't reason a/b God crating the world because we didn't experience it


...
were the only philosophers who took him seriously




His Philosophy
What was in the air

the rationalism and dedu...
speaks of intuitive custom being what allows us to understand cause/effect & connect ideas. (See Hume, Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding and [[Reason#Is man essentially a rational animal]])

Hume speaks of this custom (Enquiry, Sec 6, Para 22):

As nature has taught us the use of our limbs, without giving us the knowledge of the muscles and nerves, by which they are actuated; so she has implanted in us an instinct, which carries forward the thought in a correspondent course to that which she has established among external objects; though we are ignorant of those powers and forces, on which this regular course and succession of objects totally depends.