Hume, David
In An Inquiry Concerning Human Understanding, David Hume demonstrates how there is no way to rationally make any claims about future
occurrences. According to Hume knowledge of matters of fact come from previous experience. From building on this rationale, Hume goes on to
prove how, as humans we can only make inferences on what will happen in the future, based on our experiences of the past. But he points out that
we are incorrect to believe that we are justified in using our experience of the past as a means of evidence of what will happen in the future. Since
we have only experience of the past, we can only offer propositions of the future. Hume classifies human into two categories; Relations of Ideas,
and Matters of Fact. (240) Relations of ideas are either intuitively or demonstratively certain, such as in Mathematics (240). It can be affirmed
that 2
+ 2 equals 4, according to Humes
relations
of ideas. Matters of fact on the other hand are not ascertained in
the same manner as
Relations of Ideas. The ideas that are directly caused by impressions are called "matters of fact". With matters of fact, there is no certainty in
establishing evidence of truth since every contradiction is possible. Hume uses the example of the sun rising in the future to demonstrate how as
humans, we are unjustified in making predictions of the future based on past occurrences. As humans, we tend to use the principle of induction to
predict what will occur in the future. Out of habit, we assume that sun will rise every day, like it has done in the past, but we have no basis of actual
truth to make this justification. By claiming that the sun will rise tomorrow according to Hume is not false, nor is it true. Hume illustrates that the
contrary of every matter of fact is still possible, because it can never imply a contradiction and is conceived by the mind with the same facility and
distinctness as if ever so conformable to reality (240). Just because the sun has risen in the past does not serve as evidence for the future. Thus,
according to Hume, we are only accurate in saying that there is a fifty- percent chance that the sun will rise tomorrow. Hume felt that all reasoning
concerning matter of fact seemed to be founded on the relation between cause and effect. (241) Hume said that even though the cause preceded
the effect, there is no proof that the cause is responsible for the effect's occurrence , it could be purely coincidental. He claims that the human
notion of cause and effect is ungrounded in empirical evidence, but rather given only reasonable probability through continuous reinforcement.
Hume's rejection of causation implies a rejection of scientific laws, which are based on the general premise that one event necessarily causes
another and predictably always will. According to Hume's philosophy, therefore, knowledge of matters of fact is impossible, although as a practical
matter he freely acknowledged that people had to think in terms of cause and effect, and had to assume the validity of their perceptions, For
example, if I touch the hot stove, I will get burnt. This statement does not necessitate that when I touch the hot stove, (cause) I will always get
burnt (effect). Instead, according to Hume, I have no good reason to think that it will not happen again. Hume, however, went further, endeavoring
to prove that reason and rational judgments are merely habitual associations of distinct impressions or experiences. Hume claims that all our ideas,
which form the basis of our knowledge, are derived from impressions that we take in from the outside world and into the inside world of our mind.
Hume grouped perceptions and experiences into one of two categories: impressions and ideas. (238) According to Hume, ideas are memories of
sensations but impressions are the cause of the sensation. An impression is part of a temporary feeling, but an idea is the permanent impact of this
feeling. Hume believed that ideas were just dull imitations of impressions. Hume did not believe that a priori, knowledge based on reasoning can
deduce true knowledge. Knowledge based on reasoning alone, according to Hume does not provide understanding of the real world. He believed
that all ideas have to have impressions, that the human mind invented nothing. So, according to Hume, a priori reasoning does not offer any
understanding of the real world, because they cannot be traced to the impressions that first created them. The human mind takes simple ideas, and
turns them into complex ideas. (243) An example of this concept is the idea of an unicorn. Unicorns are conceived as being horses with horns.
Humes
claimed that an unicorn is formed of two simple ideas, the figure of
a horse and a horn. Hume concludes that our beliefs can never be
rationally
justified, but must be acknowledged to rest only upon our acquired
habits. In similar fashion, Hume argued that we cannot justify our
natural
beliefs in the reality of the self or the existence of an external
world. From all of this, he concluded that a severe skepticism is the
only
defensible
view of the world, though he does not expect us to live our daily
lives by this notion. Wesley C. Salmon points out that according to
the
principle
of uniformity of nature that even though we do not know for sure what
will happen in the future, we must assume that nature will continue
as it
has done in the past. This is the human condition, in that we have no
way of asserting what will happen in the future. But in living our
daily
lives,
we are better to go by what has occurred in the past in nature,
despite Humes philosophy that there is only a 50/50 chance. In order
to
function,
we need to accept that there is a uniformity of nature in order to
carry on with our lives. Bibliography 1. Reason & Responsibility.
Ed.
Joel
Feinberg & Russ Shafer- Landau. Belmont, CA:Wadsworth Publishing
Company, 1999.
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