David Hume's Argument Analysis

684 Words2 Pages

Hume attempts to prove that human understanding comes not from reasoning but from experience. He begins by stating the role of the sense. He continues by providing arguments for experience and thereafter stating the different types of reasoning. He concludes by stating that experience is the answer behind the concept of human understanding because it relies on custom, a very common human principle. He begins by stating that our sense has “…afforded us only the knowledge of superficial qualities of objects, while she conceals from us those powers and principles, on which the influence of these objects entirely depends.” (IV. II. 15). By this statement he claims that nature and the senses do not provide enough information for one to make an educated guess and predict how an object will behave. Hume uses this premise in order to explain that for a human to understand he must first gain experience. For a person to gain an understanding and predict how an object will react they must observe it on multiple occasions to be able to remember how it behaves. The person …show more content…

II. 16). Here he argues that there are two kinds of reasoning’s; moral reasoning and demonstrative reasoning. Hume believes that the demonstrative arguments, because they are not self contradicting, are the reason why people are able to trust the relations between objects. To “trust past experience, and make it the standard of our future judgment, these arguments must be probable only, or such as regard matter of fact and real existence” (IV. II. 19). Hume’s argument may fall into the fallacy of begging the question because one can argue that our knowledge regarding that experience depends on the fact that the future must be identical the past, a very hard supposition to make. Hume cannot argue against it but provides an example to explain why this is the best possible answer on how humans gain

Open Document