An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, and Selections from a Treatise of Human Nature: With Hume's Autobiography and a Letter (Classic Reprint)
Book Details
Author(s)David Hume
PublisherForgotten Books
ISBN / ASIN144006752X
ISBN-139781440067525
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank3,562,330
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
Philosophical Classics which The Open Court Publishing Company purposes issuing in cheap form for the convenience and instruction of the general reading public. It is an unannotated reprint, merely, of the Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, made from the posthumous edition of 1777, together with Hume scharming autobiography and the eulogistic letter of A dam Smith, usually prefixed to the History of England. These additions, with the portrait by Ramsay, which forms the frontispiece to the volume, render the picture of Hume slife complete, and leave but a word to be said concerning his philosophical importance. With the great public, Hume sfame has always rested upon his History of England, a work now antiquated as history and remarkable only for the signal elegance and symmetry of its style. But this once prevalent opinion, our age has reversed, and, as has been well remarked, Hume, the spiritual father of Kant, now takes precedence over Hume, the rival of Robertson and Gibbon. It is precisely here, in fact, that Hume ssignificance for the history of thought lies. With him modern philosophy entered upon its Kantian phase, became critical and positivistic, became a theory of knowledge. For the old false and adulterate metaphysics he sought to substitute a true metaphysics, based on the firm foundations of reason and experience. His scepticism, and of scepticism he has since been made the standard-bearer, was directed against the old ontology only, and not against science proper (inclusive of philosophy). Had Hume been an absolute sceptic he could never have produced an Immanuel Kant. .. .T he spirit of the theoretical philosophy of Hume and Kant, the fundamental conception of their investigations, and the goal at which they aim, are perfectly identical. Theirs Alfred Weber, History of Philosophy, New York, 1896. 347201.
(Typographical errors above are due to OCR software and don't occur in the book.)
About the Publisher
(Typographical errors above are due to OCR software and don't occur in the book.)
About the Publisher










