Hume's imagination:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford
Oxford University Press
2022
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Ausgabe: | First edition |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | xiii, 494 Seiten |
ISBN: | 0192864149 9780192864147 |
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adam_text | Contents Preface and Acknowledgements A Note on References 1. Introduction: A Magical Faculty 1.1 An Interpretive Blind Spot and a Philosophical Problem 1.2 The Imagination in Hume’s Treatise 1.2.1 The Works of the Imagination 1.2.2 Hume’s Problem: Cognitive Gaps 1.2.3 Imagination and Inference 1.3 Imagination, Naturalism, and Scepticism 1.3.1 Imagination and the Science of Human Nature 1.3.2 A New Foundation of Science 1.3.3 Scepticism 1.4 The Scope of the Discussion 1.5 Summary xi xv 1 1 5 5 7 9 10 10 13 14 16 17 PART I. THE ELEMENTS OF THIS PHILOSOPHY 2. The First Principle 2.1 Kinds of Perceptions 2.1.1 Phenomenology 2.1.2 Elements 2.2 Two Viewpoints and Hume’s Ontology of Perceptions 2.2.1 Two Viewpoints 2.2.2 Perceptions as Mental Existents 2.2.3 Impressions as Objects, Objects as Impressions 2.2.4 Hume’s Ontological Pluralism 2.2.5 Equivalence 2.3 The First Principle 2.3.1 Content 2.3.2 Point and Status 2.4 Existence and Reference 2.4.1 Representing Existence 2.4.2 Manners of Conception 2.4.3 Representation, Reference, and Reality 2.5 Summary 3. Our Second Principle 3.1 The Natural Limits of Object Representation 3.1.1 Enter Imagination: The Missing Shade of Blue 21 21 25 26 28 28 32 36 39 41 43 43 45 50 50 52 56 61 63 63 63
vi CONTENTS 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.1.2 Cognitive Gaps and the Naturai Mind 3.1.3 Cognitive Gaps: A Taxonomy 3.1.4 Representational Naturalism, Scepticism, and the Imagination The Second Principle 3.2.1 The Liberty of the Imagination 3.2.2 Perfect Ideas 3.2.3 Principles of Association and Transitions of Ideas The Nature of Hume’s Imagination 3.3.1 The Structural Principle: Tn the larger or more limited sense’ 3.3.2 Natural and Philosophical Relations 3.3.3 Cognitive Gaps and the Structural Principle Inferentialist Naturalism 3.4.1 Non-Mixture 3.4.2 Inference and the Structural Principle 3.4.3 Transitions and Conceptions: The Important Footnote Summary 67 70 72 75 75 78 79 84 85 91 93 96 96 99 104 108 PART II. THE INTELLECTUAL WORLD OF IDEAS 4. As ifit Were Universal 4.1 Concerning Abstract or General Ideas 4.1.1 A Cognitive Gap: Representational Naturalism and Generality 4.1.2 Hume’s Abstraction: Resemblance, Naming, Custom 4.1.2.1 Resemblance 4.1.2.2 Naming 4.1.2.3 Custom 4.1.3 Generality and the Structural Principle 4.1.3.1 Names-Ideas Inferences 4.1.3.2 Revival of Custom 4.1.3.3 Custom-revival and Generality 4.1.3.4 Generality and Inference 4.1.4 Application in Reasoning and Possibility of Error 4.2 We Accompany our Ideas with a Kind of Reflection 4.2.1 Distinctions of Reason 4.2.2 The Readiness, with which the Imagination Suggests Its Ideas 4.3 Summary 5. Nothing we Imagine is Absolutely Impossible 5.1 Whatever the Mind Clearly Conceives Includes the Idea of Possible Existence 5.1.1 The Cognitive Gap of Modality 5.1.2 The Established Maxim: Content and Point 5.1.3 Imagination
and Modality: Separability and Determination 5.2 Hume’s Philosophy of Modality 5.2.1 Metaphysical and Physical Possibility 113 113 113 117 119 120 121 122 122 123 124 126 128 131 131 135 139 141 142 142 145 152 162 163
CONTENTS 5.2.2 Absolute and Epistemic Possibility 5.2.3 Humean Modalities and Sceptical Realism 5.3 To Consider the Matter A Priori 5.3.1 Hume’s A Priori 5.3.2 From Metaphysical Necessity to the A Priori 5.3.3 Explaining A Priori Maxims 5.4 Summary VÌI 167 171 176 176 179 182 184 PART III. A NEW SYSTEM OF REALITIES 6. A Just Inference 6.1 The Cognitive Gap of Causation 6.1.1 Causal Reasoning and Causal Content: Inferring the Unobserved 6.1.2 The Missing Idea of Cause: Necessity 6.1.3 From Necessity to Inference 6.1.4 From Inference to Experience 6.1.5 From Experience to the Imagination 6.2 The Nature of that Inference 6.2.1 Causation as a Natural Relation 6.2.2 Customary Transitions 6.2.3 Causal Ideas 6.3 Summary 7. That Intelligible Quality 189 190 190 194 196 201 204 207 208 210 217 221 223 7.1 The Missing Idea of Necessary Connexion 223 7.2 Imagination and the Necessity of Causes 227 7.2.1 From Causal Inference to Necessary Connexion 227 7.2.2 From Necessary Connexion to the Imagination 229 7.2.2.1 The Inferential Core 229 7.2.2.2 The Impression of Determination 233 7.2.2.3 Causal Necessity and the Imagination 234 7.2.3 Transitions and Conceptions: Spreading in the Mind, Spreading on the Objects 235 7.2.3.1 Conceiving Connexions 235 7.2.3.2 Spreading in the Mind 237 7.2.3.3 Spreading on External Objects 239 7.3 Humes Philosophy of Causation 243 7.3.1 The Two Definitions: Structure, Rationale, and Implications 243 7.3.1.1 The Complexity of Causal Content 243 7.3.1.2 Inferentialism and the Two Definitions 244 7.3.1.3 The Ontology of Causation 248 7.3.2 True Meaning and
Wrong Application 252 7.4 Summary 259
Viii CONTENTS PART IV. AN EXTERNAL AND INTERNAL WORLD 8. The Ideas which are Most Essential to Geometry 8.1 Representing Space and Time 8.1.1 Manners of Disposition of Visible and Tangible Objects 8.1.2 Finite Divisibility and Adequate Representation 8.2 Imagining Space and Time 8.2.1 An Abstract Idea of Time and Space 8.2.2 The Definitions and Demonstrations of Geometry 8.2.2.1 The Cognitive Gap of Geometrical Equality 8.2.2.2 Closing the Gap: Geometrical Equality 8.2.2.3 The Illusion of Perfect Equality 8.2.3 A Vacuum or Pure Extension 8.2.3.1 The Missing Idea of a Vacuum 8.2.3.2 We Falsely Imagine We Can Form such an Idea 8.2.3.3 A Vacuum is Asserted 8.3 Summary 9. The World as Something Real and Durable 9.1 The Missing Idea of Body 9.1.1 The Principle Concerning the Existence of Body 9.1.2 The Cognitive Gap of External Existence 9.1.2.1 The Senses 9.1.2.2 Reason 9.1.3 Refining the Individuation of the Gap 9.2 Imagining a Real and Durable World: Coherence and Spreading 9.2.1 ‘Spreading out in my mind the whole sea and continent’ 9.2.2 The Hysteresis of the Imagination 9.2.3 ‘A principle too weak to support so vast an edifice’ 9.3 Imagining a Real and Durable World: Constancy and Identity 9.3.1 The Cognitive Gap of Perfect Identity 9.3.2 The Cognitive Gap of Imperfect Identity 9.3.3 From Imperfect Identity to Continued and Distinct Existence 9.3.3.1 The Opposition of Two Principles 9.3.3.2 How to Reconcile Such Opposite Opinions 9.4 The External World: Perceptions, Bodies, Qualities 9.4.1 Perceptions without the Mind, Objects within the Mind 9.4.2 Bodies Existing with the
Qualities of Impressions 9.5 Scepticism with Regard to the Senses 9.5.1 The Vulgar and the Philosophical Belief 9.5.2 The Sceptical Malady and Hume’s Realism 9.6 Summary 10. A Mind or Thinking Person 10.1 The Missing Ideas of Soul and Self 10.1.1 The Soul as Substance 10.1.2 Selfless Perceptions 263 264 264 269 274 275 275 276 278 282 284 285 291 294 296 299 299 299 303 303 305 306 308 309 312 314 316 317 322 325 325 326 328 329 334 338 339 342 347 350 351 351 353
CONTENTS 10.2 Imagining the Self and Personal Identity 10.2.1 Identity of Successive Perceptions 10.2.2 The True Idea of the Human Mind 10.2.3 The Same Thinking Person 10.3 Humes Recantation 10.3.1 The Labyrinth 10.3.2 United in our Thought or Consciousness 10.3.3 A Difficulty too Hard for my Understanding 10.4 Summary ІХ 356 356 360 366 370 370 374 381 384 PART V. THE IMAGINATION OR UNDERSTANDING, CALL IT WHICH YOU PLEASE 11. One ofthe Greatest Mysteries of Philosophy 11.1 Belief as Attitude: Assent 11.1.1 The Cognitive Gap of Assent 11.1.2 Assent, Sensible Representation, and the A Priori 11.1.3 Imagination, Probability, and Assent 11.2 Belief as a Mental State 11.2.1 The Missing State of Belief 11.2.2 Imagination, Belief, and Doxastic Deliberation 11.3 Scepticism and the Imagination 11.3.1 Hume’s Sceptical Concerns: Sources and Varieties 11.3.2 Reflection, Imagination, and the Possibility of Belief 11.3.3 The Dangerous Dilemma 11.4 Summary 12. The Ultimate Judge of All Systems of Philosophy 12.1 The General and More Established Properties of the Imagination 12.1.1 An Unjust Blame 12.1.2 The First Question: ‘Principles, which, however common, are neither universal nor unavoidable in human nature’ 12.1.3 Rules of Judgement 12.2 Reasonable Foundations of Belief 12.2.1 The Test of the Most Critical Examination 12.2.2 The Truth and Fidelity of our Faculties 12.2.3 Truth, Imagination, and Belief 12.2.4 The Improvement of the Human Mind 12.3 Love of Truth 12.3.1 The Second Question: Tn the same sense, that a malady is said to be natural’ 12.3.2 The Cognitive Gap of Value and
Hume’s Naturalistic Sentimentalism 12.3.3 The Satisfaction We Derive from the Discovery of Truth 389 389 389 394 396 400 400 403 409 410 413 422 426 429 430 431 433 435 437 437 440 443 447 450 450 452 453
X CONTENTS 12.4 Oblig’d by Our Reason 12.4.1 The First Source of All Our Enquiries 12.4.2 The Title of Reason 12.5 Summary Appendix: Principles ofHumes Theory of the Imagination Bibliography Analytical Index Index ofNames 459 459 462 467 471 475 487 492
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adam_txt |
Contents Preface and Acknowledgements A Note on References 1. Introduction: A Magical Faculty 1.1 An Interpretive Blind Spot and a Philosophical Problem 1.2 The Imagination in Hume’s Treatise 1.2.1 The Works of the Imagination 1.2.2 Hume’s Problem: Cognitive Gaps 1.2.3 Imagination and Inference 1.3 Imagination, Naturalism, and Scepticism 1.3.1 Imagination and the Science of Human Nature 1.3.2 A New Foundation of Science 1.3.3 Scepticism 1.4 The Scope of the Discussion 1.5 Summary xi xv 1 1 5 5 7 9 10 10 13 14 16 17 PART I. THE ELEMENTS OF THIS PHILOSOPHY 2. The First Principle 2.1 Kinds of Perceptions 2.1.1 Phenomenology 2.1.2 Elements 2.2 Two Viewpoints and Hume’s Ontology of Perceptions 2.2.1 Two Viewpoints 2.2.2 Perceptions as Mental Existents 2.2.3 Impressions as Objects, Objects as Impressions 2.2.4 Hume’s Ontological Pluralism 2.2.5 Equivalence 2.3 The First Principle 2.3.1 Content 2.3.2 Point and Status 2.4 Existence and Reference 2.4.1 Representing Existence 2.4.2 Manners of Conception 2.4.3 Representation, Reference, and Reality 2.5 Summary 3. Our Second Principle 3.1 The Natural Limits of Object Representation 3.1.1 Enter Imagination: The Missing Shade of Blue 21 21 25 26 28 28 32 36 39 41 43 43 45 50 50 52 56 61 63 63 63
vi CONTENTS 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.1.2 Cognitive Gaps and the Naturai Mind 3.1.3 Cognitive Gaps: A Taxonomy 3.1.4 Representational Naturalism, Scepticism, and the Imagination The Second Principle 3.2.1 The Liberty of the Imagination 3.2.2 Perfect Ideas 3.2.3 Principles of Association and Transitions of Ideas The Nature of Hume’s Imagination 3.3.1 The Structural Principle: Tn the larger or more limited sense’ 3.3.2 Natural and Philosophical Relations 3.3.3 Cognitive Gaps and the Structural Principle Inferentialist Naturalism 3.4.1 Non-Mixture 3.4.2 Inference and the Structural Principle 3.4.3 Transitions and Conceptions: The Important Footnote Summary 67 70 72 75 75 78 79 84 85 91 93 96 96 99 104 108 PART II. THE INTELLECTUAL WORLD OF IDEAS 4. As ifit Were Universal 4.1 Concerning Abstract or General Ideas 4.1.1 A Cognitive Gap: Representational Naturalism and Generality 4.1.2 Hume’s Abstraction: Resemblance, Naming, Custom 4.1.2.1 Resemblance 4.1.2.2 Naming 4.1.2.3 Custom 4.1.3 Generality and the Structural Principle 4.1.3.1 Names-Ideas Inferences 4.1.3.2 Revival of Custom 4.1.3.3 Custom-revival and Generality 4.1.3.4 Generality and Inference 4.1.4 Application in Reasoning and Possibility of Error 4.2 We Accompany our Ideas with a Kind of Reflection 4.2.1 Distinctions of Reason 4.2.2 The Readiness, with which the Imagination Suggests Its Ideas 4.3 Summary 5. Nothing we Imagine is Absolutely Impossible 5.1 Whatever the Mind Clearly Conceives Includes the Idea of Possible Existence 5.1.1 The Cognitive Gap of Modality 5.1.2 The Established Maxim: Content and Point 5.1.3 Imagination
and Modality: Separability and Determination 5.2 Hume’s Philosophy of Modality 5.2.1 Metaphysical and Physical Possibility 113 113 113 117 119 120 121 122 122 123 124 126 128 131 131 135 139 141 142 142 145 152 162 163
CONTENTS 5.2.2 Absolute and Epistemic Possibility 5.2.3 Humean Modalities and Sceptical Realism 5.3 To Consider the Matter A Priori 5.3.1 Hume’s A Priori 5.3.2 From Metaphysical Necessity to the A Priori 5.3.3 Explaining A Priori Maxims 5.4 Summary VÌI 167 171 176 176 179 182 184 PART III. A NEW SYSTEM OF REALITIES 6. A Just Inference 6.1 The Cognitive Gap of Causation 6.1.1 Causal Reasoning and Causal Content: Inferring the Unobserved 6.1.2 The Missing Idea of Cause: Necessity 6.1.3 From Necessity to Inference 6.1.4 From Inference to Experience 6.1.5 From Experience to the Imagination 6.2 The Nature of that Inference 6.2.1 Causation as a Natural Relation 6.2.2 Customary Transitions 6.2.3 Causal Ideas 6.3 Summary 7. That Intelligible Quality 189 190 190 194 196 201 204 207 208 210 217 221 223 7.1 The Missing Idea of Necessary Connexion 223 7.2 Imagination and the Necessity of Causes 227 7.2.1 From Causal Inference to Necessary Connexion 227 7.2.2 From Necessary Connexion to the Imagination 229 7.2.2.1 The Inferential Core 229 7.2.2.2 The Impression of Determination 233 7.2.2.3 Causal Necessity and the Imagination 234 7.2.3 Transitions and Conceptions: Spreading in the Mind, Spreading on the Objects 235 7.2.3.1 Conceiving Connexions 235 7.2.3.2 Spreading in the Mind 237 7.2.3.3 Spreading on External Objects 239 7.3 Humes Philosophy of Causation 243 7.3.1 The Two Definitions: Structure, Rationale, and Implications 243 7.3.1.1 The Complexity of Causal Content 243 7.3.1.2 Inferentialism and the Two Definitions 244 7.3.1.3 The Ontology of Causation 248 7.3.2 True Meaning and
Wrong Application 252 7.4 Summary 259
Viii CONTENTS PART IV. AN EXTERNAL AND INTERNAL WORLD 8. The Ideas which are Most Essential to Geometry 8.1 Representing Space and Time 8.1.1 Manners of Disposition of Visible and Tangible Objects 8.1.2 Finite Divisibility and Adequate Representation 8.2 Imagining Space and Time 8.2.1 An Abstract Idea of Time and Space 8.2.2 The Definitions and Demonstrations of Geometry 8.2.2.1 The Cognitive Gap of Geometrical Equality 8.2.2.2 Closing the Gap: Geometrical Equality 8.2.2.3 The Illusion of Perfect Equality 8.2.3 A Vacuum or Pure Extension 8.2.3.1 The Missing Idea of a Vacuum 8.2.3.2 We Falsely Imagine We Can Form such an Idea 8.2.3.3 A Vacuum is Asserted 8.3 Summary 9. The World as Something Real and Durable 9.1 The Missing Idea of Body 9.1.1 The Principle Concerning the Existence of Body 9.1.2 The Cognitive Gap of External Existence 9.1.2.1 The Senses 9.1.2.2 Reason 9.1.3 Refining the Individuation of the Gap 9.2 Imagining a Real and Durable World: Coherence and Spreading 9.2.1 ‘Spreading out in my mind the whole sea and continent’ 9.2.2 The Hysteresis of the Imagination 9.2.3 ‘A principle too weak to support so vast an edifice’ 9.3 Imagining a Real and Durable World: Constancy and Identity 9.3.1 The Cognitive Gap of Perfect Identity 9.3.2 The Cognitive Gap of Imperfect Identity 9.3.3 From Imperfect Identity to Continued and Distinct Existence 9.3.3.1 The Opposition of Two Principles 9.3.3.2 How to Reconcile Such Opposite Opinions 9.4 The External World: Perceptions, Bodies, Qualities 9.4.1 Perceptions without the Mind, Objects within the Mind 9.4.2 Bodies Existing with the
Qualities of Impressions 9.5 Scepticism with Regard to the Senses 9.5.1 The Vulgar and the Philosophical Belief 9.5.2 The Sceptical Malady and Hume’s Realism 9.6 Summary 10. A Mind or Thinking Person 10.1 The Missing Ideas of Soul and Self 10.1.1 The Soul as Substance 10.1.2 Selfless Perceptions 263 264 264 269 274 275 275 276 278 282 284 285 291 294 296 299 299 299 303 303 305 306 308 309 312 314 316 317 322 325 325 326 328 329 334 338 339 342 347 350 351 351 353
CONTENTS 10.2 Imagining the Self and Personal Identity 10.2.1 Identity of Successive Perceptions 10.2.2 The True Idea of the Human Mind 10.2.3 The Same Thinking Person 10.3 Humes Recantation 10.3.1 The Labyrinth 10.3.2 United in our Thought or Consciousness 10.3.3 A Difficulty too Hard for my Understanding 10.4 Summary ІХ 356 356 360 366 370 370 374 381 384 PART V. THE IMAGINATION OR UNDERSTANDING, CALL IT WHICH YOU PLEASE 11. One ofthe Greatest Mysteries of Philosophy 11.1 Belief as Attitude: Assent 11.1.1 The Cognitive Gap of Assent 11.1.2 Assent, Sensible Representation, and the A Priori 11.1.3 Imagination, Probability, and Assent 11.2 Belief as a Mental State 11.2.1 The Missing State of Belief 11.2.2 Imagination, Belief, and Doxastic Deliberation 11.3 Scepticism and the Imagination 11.3.1 Hume’s Sceptical Concerns: Sources and Varieties 11.3.2 Reflection, Imagination, and the Possibility of Belief 11.3.3 The Dangerous Dilemma 11.4 Summary 12. The Ultimate Judge of All Systems of Philosophy 12.1 The General and More Established Properties of the Imagination 12.1.1 An Unjust Blame 12.1.2 The First Question: ‘Principles, which, however common, are neither universal nor unavoidable in human nature’ 12.1.3 Rules of Judgement 12.2 Reasonable Foundations of Belief 12.2.1 The Test of the Most Critical Examination 12.2.2 The Truth and Fidelity of our Faculties 12.2.3 Truth, Imagination, and Belief 12.2.4 The Improvement of the Human Mind 12.3 Love of Truth 12.3.1 The Second Question: Tn the same sense, that a malady is said to be natural’ 12.3.2 The Cognitive Gap of Value and
Hume’s Naturalistic Sentimentalism 12.3.3 The Satisfaction We Derive from the Discovery of Truth 389 389 389 394 396 400 400 403 409 410 413 422 426 429 430 431 433 435 437 437 440 443 447 450 450 452 453
X CONTENTS 12.4 Oblig’d by Our Reason 12.4.1 The First Source of All Our Enquiries 12.4.2 The Title of Reason 12.5 Summary Appendix: Principles ofHumes Theory of the Imagination Bibliography Analytical Index Index ofNames 459 459 462 467 471 475 487 492 |
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illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T20:31:36Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:38:32Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0192864149 9780192864147 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-033831602 |
oclc_num | 1349548863 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-11 DE-29 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-11 DE-29 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-12 |
physical | xiii, 494 Seiten |
psigel | BSB_NED_20230607 |
publishDate | 2022 |
publishDateSearch | 2022 |
publishDateSort | 2022 |
publisher | Oxford University Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Magri, Tito 1948- Verfasser (DE-588)1272427137 aut Hume's imagination Tito Magri First edition Oxford Oxford University Press 2022 xiii, 494 Seiten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Hume, David 1711-1776 (DE-588)118554735 gnd rswk-swf Einbildungskraft (DE-588)4151235-2 gnd rswk-swf Hume, David 1711-1776 (DE-588)118554735 p Einbildungskraft (DE-588)4151235-2 s DE-604 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=033831602&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Magri, Tito 1948- Hume's imagination Hume, David 1711-1776 (DE-588)118554735 gnd Einbildungskraft (DE-588)4151235-2 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)118554735 (DE-588)4151235-2 |
title | Hume's imagination |
title_auth | Hume's imagination |
title_exact_search | Hume's imagination |
title_exact_search_txtP | Hume's imagination |
title_full | Hume's imagination Tito Magri |
title_fullStr | Hume's imagination Tito Magri |
title_full_unstemmed | Hume's imagination Tito Magri |
title_short | Hume's imagination |
title_sort | hume s imagination |
topic | Hume, David 1711-1776 (DE-588)118554735 gnd Einbildungskraft (DE-588)4151235-2 gnd |
topic_facet | Hume, David 1711-1776 Einbildungskraft |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=033831602&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT magritito humesimagination |