Description |
x, 421 pages ; 24 cm |
Contents |
Robison, W.L. David Hume, naturalist and meta-sceptic. - Stove, D.C. Why should probability be the guide of life? - Zabeeh, F. Hume's problem of induction. - Árdal, P.S. Some implications of the virtue of reasonableness in Hume's Treatise. - Yandell, K.E. Hume on religious belief. - Nathan, G.J. The existence and nature of God in Hume's theism. - Anderson, R.F. The location, extension, shape, and size of Hume's perceptions. - Capaldi, N. Hume's theory of the passions. - Jones, P. Strains in Hume and Wittgenstein. -Livingston, D.W. Hume's historical theory of meaning. - Wolin, S.S. Hume and conservatism. - Flew, A. Infinite divisibility in Hume's treatise. - Noxon, J. Remembering and imagining the past. - Stockton, C.N. Economics and the mechanism of historical progress in Hume's History. - Jones, P. Cause, reason and objectivity in Hume's aesthetics. - King, J.T. The place of the language of morals in Hume's second Enquiry. - Glossop, R.J. Hume, Stevenson and Hare on moral language. - Walton, C. Hume and Jefferson on the uses of history. - Adair, D. "That politics may be reduced to a science." |
Analysis |
Hume, David |
Notes |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Subject |
Hume, David, 1711-1776.
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Author |
King, James T., 1933-
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|
Livingston, Donald W.
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LC no. |
76013968 |
ISBN |
0823210073 |
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0823210081 (paperback) |
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