There cannot be three passions “more nearly resembling each other” than philosophy, hunting, and gaming, asserts Hume in the Treatise. Their origin is pleasure and they all give pleasure from the same principles: the exercise of the mind, utility or importance and success. This scandalous assertion is strictly connected with Hume’s discussion of the philosophical tradition. Once more he entitles himself to the glorious name of inventor for “the use he makes” of traditional metaphors. The assertion is also connected with Hume’s own life: hunter, gamester and (sceptical) philosopher. Hume fires at magpies, as a boy; he plays whist, when he’s grown up; he loves truth, always. His fame as a whist player will accompany him in the afterlife. Smit...
Which are the vulgar moral systems criticized by Hume in the famous Treatise’s is-ought passage? Whi...
Hume’s reception in German philosophy is rather important throughout the 18thand 19thcentury, where ...
Paris, Reims and La Flèche in the 30s. Paris in 1748. Again, Paris in the 60s. Hume is always lookin...
There cannot be three passions “more nearly resembling each other” than philosophy, hunting, and gam...
In his famous letter of 10 December 1513 to Francesco Vettori, Machiavelli depicts his own life as a...
International audienceIn A Treatise on Human Nature, Hume identifies moral philosophy with the scien...
I try to create a coherent narrative from the totality of Hume’s 1776 autobiographical record “My Ow...
Scott Yenor argues that David Hume\u27s reputation as a skeptic is greatly exaggerated. In David Hum...
Anyone who scrutinizes the status of eloquence in Hume cannot dismiss questioning the author's analy...
Brague Rémi. David Hume, Les essais esthétiques. 1ère partie : Art et Société. Trad., intr. et notes...
The article looks closely at the interpretation of Hume’s ideas and character in the Parisian letter...
National Library of Scotland, MS 23159.7 is a thirty-two line poem in the hand of David Hume (1711–7...
Throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Hume's philosophical -writings received little a...
In his magnum opus, David Hume asserts that a person is “nothing but a bundle or collection of diffe...
Did David Hume and William Hogarth know each other? Did either man ever mention the other in his wr...
Which are the vulgar moral systems criticized by Hume in the famous Treatise’s is-ought passage? Whi...
Hume’s reception in German philosophy is rather important throughout the 18thand 19thcentury, where ...
Paris, Reims and La Flèche in the 30s. Paris in 1748. Again, Paris in the 60s. Hume is always lookin...
There cannot be three passions “more nearly resembling each other” than philosophy, hunting, and gam...
In his famous letter of 10 December 1513 to Francesco Vettori, Machiavelli depicts his own life as a...
International audienceIn A Treatise on Human Nature, Hume identifies moral philosophy with the scien...
I try to create a coherent narrative from the totality of Hume’s 1776 autobiographical record “My Ow...
Scott Yenor argues that David Hume\u27s reputation as a skeptic is greatly exaggerated. In David Hum...
Anyone who scrutinizes the status of eloquence in Hume cannot dismiss questioning the author's analy...
Brague Rémi. David Hume, Les essais esthétiques. 1ère partie : Art et Société. Trad., intr. et notes...
The article looks closely at the interpretation of Hume’s ideas and character in the Parisian letter...
National Library of Scotland, MS 23159.7 is a thirty-two line poem in the hand of David Hume (1711–7...
Throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Hume's philosophical -writings received little a...
In his magnum opus, David Hume asserts that a person is “nothing but a bundle or collection of diffe...
Did David Hume and William Hogarth know each other? Did either man ever mention the other in his wr...
Which are the vulgar moral systems criticized by Hume in the famous Treatise’s is-ought passage? Whi...
Hume’s reception in German philosophy is rather important throughout the 18thand 19thcentury, where ...
Paris, Reims and La Flèche in the 30s. Paris in 1748. Again, Paris in the 60s. Hume is always lookin...