David Hume: Causality, Induction, and the Subjectivity of Ethics by Leonard Peikoff, part 40 of 50

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  • Опубликовано: 18 янв 2025

Комментарии • 5

  • @tomburroughes9834
    @tomburroughes9834 Год назад +8

    What must drive Humeans nuts is that they think that DH was the ultimate sophisticate, mocking and pulling down what he thought of as the dogmas and mistakes of his time (and he was certainly effective against religion), only to see his own positions demolished with gusto, and to the sound of distant audience laughter, by someone such as Dr Peikoff, the intellectual heir of a novelist who fled from Russia and did not even have letters after her name.
    The whole series of lectures are masterpieces of erudition, passion and clarity.

  • @ErnestRamaj
    @ErnestRamaj 4 года назад +5

    How great was he, he destroyed everything.

  • @jamestagge3429
    @jamestagge3429 10 месяцев назад

    ANY THOUGHTS?....................1. Hume surrenders to the understanding that entities are distinct in what they are and by that, that which they are not. A square is distinctively that which it is for its characteristics (squareness) and that which it is not, possessing no characteristics of a circle (circleness).
    2. That an entity can be that which it is distinctively and not other things is due to its “distinctive” physical characteristics or physicality. E.g., the billiard ball in his analogous refutation of the deterministic nature of cause and effect is distinctively just that, a billiard ball and not an apple or beach ball or the like.
    3. He thus, by definition, accepted that entities are that which they are by the assertion of their form and function (characteristics) into materiality (quantum mechanics validates this unequivocally). Were this not so, he could not have appealed to them that they would be employed in his propositions.
    4. He also, by definition, accepted that entities are material, i.e., physical, defined by their physical characteristics (a ball is round and not square, etc.) or they could not be considered at all and could not be participants in his propositions. That he specifically chose billiard balls for the players in his analogy demonstrates his acceptance of this (above) as a recognition.
    5. By this he submitted to the understanding that motion for being intangible, could NOT be a characteristic of the billiard ball which is moving but a phenomenon in the context of consideration, it moving toward a stationary billiard ball that it might cause it to move when struck. Motion of the billiard ball in this context is only a phenomenon of concern with the billiard balls physicality or characteristics.
    6. Given the above, we know analytically that the motion of the billiard ball had to have been imparted to it by the force of another entity of which it was concerned when it struck the billiard ball.
    7. Thus, by that same means by which the motion of the billiard ball was imparted to it by a prior entity also effected by motion, it would be imparted to the stationary billiard ball by the moving billiard ball.
    8. We are able then to induce that the stationary billiard ball would in fact move if struck by the first because of the nature of motion as opposed to that of the physicality of the billiard balls for we know analytically that motion cannot be a part or characteristic of the physicality of the billiard balls but only an imparted phenomenon. So if it was imparted to the first billiard ball by it being struck, so too would it be imparted to the second when being struck.

  • @jameswiblishauser9745
    @jameswiblishauser9745 3 года назад +3

    All is lost

    • @cas343
      @cas343 Год назад +1

      Don't let it go.