توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب The Continuum Companion to Hume
نام کتاب : The Continuum Companion to Hume
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : همنشین پیوسته هیوم
سری :
نویسندگان : Alan Bailey, Dan O’Brien
ناشر : Bloomsbury Academic
سال نشر : 2015
تعداد صفحات : 473
ISBN (شابک) : 9781474243933 , 9781474243940
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 5 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Cover\nHalfTitle\nSeries\nTitle\nCopyright\nContents\nList of Contributors\nAbbreviations for Works Written by Hume\nAcknowledgements\nDavid Hume – A Timeline\nIntroduction\n1 Hume’s Life, Intellectual Context and Reception\rEmilio Mazza\n 1. ‘Wake-minded’\n 2. My own (unsuccessful) writings\n 3. ‘Never to reply to any body’\n 4. Not unfit for business: ‘The army is too late’\n 5. My own fortune\n 6. Strike out Sterne: Fashion in Paris\n 7. Lifelong Lucian and the Irish Skyths\n 8. Hume and Smith: A living summer dialogue\n 9. Stuck in a bog (fishwomen for theologians)\n2 Hume’s Empiricist Inner Epistemology:\n 1. Introduction\n 2. Copying and its targets\n 3. Vivacity as ‘qualia’\n 4. Vivacity as presentedness\n 5. Vivacity as verisimilitude\n 6. Vivacity as functional role\n 7. Concluding remarks: Hume’s development of the theory of ideas\n3 Hume’s ‘Scepticism’ about Induction\rPeter Millican\n 1. A sceptical argument, with a non-sceptical outcome\n 2. Hume’s sceptical argument\n 3. The nature of Hume’s sceptical conclusion\n 4. Conclusion: Scepticism and rational foundations\n Appendix: Hume’s Argument concerning Induction (from Section 4 of the Enquiry concerning Human Understanding)\n4 The Psychology and Epistemology of Hume’s\n 1. The system of the Treatise\n 2. The path to the First Principle\n 3. The path to the Second Principle\n 4. The Argument of the Abstract and the Enquiry\n 5. Analogies, experiments, recalcitrant data, and refinements\n 6. The psychological foundations of epistemological normativity\n 7. Epistemological norms\n 8. General rules\n 9. Probabilities\n 10. ‘Philosophical’ belief\n5 Causation and Necessary Connection\rHelen Beebee\n 1. Introduction\n 2. Hume’s basic account of causation\n 3. The two definitions\n 4. Interpretations: traditional, sceptical realist and projectivist\n 5. Problems and prospects\n6 Hume on Scepticism and the Moral Sciences\rAlan Bailey\n 1. Hume’s radical scepticism\n 2. The tension between scepticism and abstruse inquiry\n 3. Scepticism and the curbing of the restless imagination\n7 The Self and Personal Identity\rHarold Noonan\n 1. Introduction\n 2. The fiction of personal identity\n 3. The reification of perceptions\n 4. The rejection of the substantial self\n 5. Hume’s account of the source of the mistake\n 6. The labyrinth\n8 ‘All my hopes vanish’: Hume on the Mind\rGalen Strawson\n 1. ‘The essence of the mind [is] unknown’\n 2. The empirically warranted idea of the mind\n 3. Why is the empirically warranted idea of the mind not enough for Hume?\n 4. What does Hume need to do that he cannot do?\n 5. What has caused his difficulty to arise in the first place?\n 6. The heart of the problem\n 7. The unanswerable objection?\n 8. Garrett’s objection\n 9. Could Hume’s problem be the ‘Problem of Detail’?\n 10. ‘Explain’?\n 11. Reply to Garrett’s objection\n 12. A final response\n9 Action, Reason and the Passions\rConstantine Sandis\n 1. Action and its causes\n 2. Motivation, reason and belief\n 3. Ruling passions and the will\n10 Free Will\rJames A. Harris\n11 Hume on Miracles\rDuncan Pritchard and Alasdair Richmond\n 1. Hume’s argument: Readings and misreadings\n 2. Hume and the epistemology of testimony\n 3. Bayesian versions of Hume’s argument\n 4. Concluding remarks\n12 David Hume and the Argument to Design\rAndrew Pyle\n 1. Background\n 2. Reading the Dialogues\n 3. Cleanthes’ first statement of the argument to design\n 4. Second statement of the argument to design: The ‘irregular’ inference\n 5. The design argument and theism\n 6. Alternative possibilities\n 7. The inference problem of evil\n 8. Conclusion\n13 Psychological Explanations of Religious Belief\rDavid O’Connor\n 1. Hume’s Philosophical Question about the Origin of Religion\n 2. Propensities and Projection\n 3. Objections to Hume’s Naturalistic Project\n 4. The Feasibility of Hume’s Naturalistic Project\n14 Hume’s Sentimentalist Account of Moral Judgement\rJulia Driver\n 1. Human nature\n 2. The case against realism\n 3. The general point of view\n 4. The case for non-cognitivism\n 6. Conclusion\n15 Hume and the Virtues\rDan O’Brien\n 1. Virtue\n 2. Virtue and sympathy\n 3. The moral virtues\n 4. The artificial virtues\n 5. The monkish virtues\n16 Hume’s Human Nature\rRussell Hardin\n 1. Self-interest\n 2. Naturalism\n 3. Mirroring\n 4. Convention\n 5. Morality psychologized\n 6. Institutional utilitarianism\n 6. Promise-keeping and justice\n 7. Legal theory\n 8. Concluding remarks\n17 Hume and Feminism\rLívia Guimarães\n 1. Introduction\n 2. Annette Baier\n 3. Life\n 4. Circumstance: Method and content – embodiment and embeddedness\n 5. Gendering: Feminine traits\n 6. Concepts\n 7. Ungendering\n 8. Utopias\n18 Hume on Economic Well-Being\rMargaret Schabas\n19 ‘Of the Standard of Taste’: Decisions, Rules and Critical Argument\rM. W. Rowe\n 1. QUALIFIED SUBJECTIVISM\n 2. RULES: A CRITIQUE\n 3. SANCHO’S KINSMEN: A MISLEADING ANALOGY\n 4. SANCHO’S KINSMEN: THE FUNCTIONS OF CRITICAL ARGUMENT\n 5. THE RATIONALITY OF CRITICAL ARGUMENT\n 6. TRUE JUDGES AND EXCELLENT CRITICS\n 7. CONCLUSION\n20 Hume on History\rTimothy M. Costelloe\n 1. Introduction\n 2. Philosophical history and matter of fact\n 3. Philosophical history and the nature of historical evidence\n 4. Historical wisdom\n21 Hume’s Legacy and the Idea of British Empiricism\rPaul Russell\n 1. Interpretation, legacy and colligatory concepts\n 2. Hume and the idea of British Empiricism\n 3. Hume, irreligion and the myth of British empiricism\n 4. Myth and reality in Hume’s legacy\nBibliography\nINDEX OF NAMES\nINDEX OF TOPICS