Author | : Dan O'Brien |
File Size | : 52,9 Mb |
Publisher | : Unknown |
Language | : English |
Release Date | : 07 May 2024 |
ISBN | : 1032357045 |
Pages | : 0 pages |
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Author | : Dan O'Brien |
File Size | : 52,9 Mb |
Publisher | : Unknown |
Language | : English |
Release Date | : 07 May 2024 |
ISBN | : 1032357045 |
Pages | : 0 pages |
Download or read online Hume on Testimony written by Dan O'Brien, published by Unknown which was released on 2023. Get Hume on Testimony Books now! Available in PDF, ePub and Kindle.
Get BookSince its publication in the mid-eighteenth century, Hume's discussion of miracles has been the target of severe and often ill-tempered attacks. In this book, one of our leading historians of philosophy offers a systematic response to these attacks. Arguing that these criticisms have--from the very start--rested on misreadings, Robert Fogelin
Get BookThis book is the first devoted to Hume’s conception of testimony. Hume is usually taken to be a reductionist with respect to testimony, with trust in others dependent on the evidence possessed by individuals concerning the reliability of texts or speakers. This account is taken from Hume’s essay
Get BookThe Testimony of Sense attempts to answer a neglected but important question: what became of epistemology in the late eighteenth century, in the period between Hume's scepticism and Romantic idealism? It finds that two factors in particular reshaped the nature of 'empiricism': the socialisation of experience by Scottish Enlightenment thinkers
Get BookIt is tempting to think that, if a person's beliefs are coherent, they are also likely to be true. Indeed, this truth-conduciveness claim is the cornerstone of the popular coherence theory of knowledge and justification. Hitherto much confusion has been caused by the inability of coherence theorists to define their
Get BookThis vital study offers a new interpretation of Hume's famous "Of Miracles," which notoriously argues against the possibility of miracles. By situating Hume's popular argument in the context of the eighteenth-century debate on miracles, Earman shows Hume's argument to be largely unoriginal and chiefly without merit where it is original.
Get BookDavid Johnson seeks to overthrow one of the widely accepted tenets of Anglo-American philosophy—that of the success of the Humean case against the rational credibility of reports of miracles. In a manner unattempted in any other single work, he meticulously examines all the main variants of Humean reasoning on
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