Compare And Contrast Locke And Hume

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Locke and Hume
Philosophers tend to be of those rare breed of individuals who have their unique outlook on life and on the world in general. When looking at the philosophers who lived around the end of the Renaissance period, common themes of mortality, human nature, and the divine all tend to get blurred into overarching ideologies about the world and the nature of humanity in general. While not all philosophers focus on the same idea of humanity and the human condition, John Locke and David Hume both took particular interest in the ways that humans view themselves, the world around them, and the subject of identity of self in contrast to the universe. Through analysis of John Locke’s perspectives as shown in An Essay Concerning Human Understanding …show more content…

Like John Locke, Hume believed that at birth people were a blank slate in terms of mental perception but his perspective was that humans do have one advantage: reason. Hume believed that everyone has the ability to reason with the natural order of the world and that it is this ability that separates us from other animals. However, Hume argues “against the rationalists that, although reason is needed to discover the facts of any concrete situation and the general social impact of a trait of character or a practice over time, reason alone is insufficient to yield a judgment that something is virtuous or vicious” (Hume’s Moral Philosophy). It is this distinction that separates him from some of his compatriots in terms of what he considers to be the drive of the whole of …show more content…

For each individual, the idea is that there is a strict division in the relation of knowledge and reason. This means that while we might learn a new fact, it is not necessary for the individual to take that into the part of their everyday decision making but, instead, that they must always weigh facts. Hume believed that people act on “passions” and reason is the only protection from acting out without provocation. “The direct passions, which include desire, aversion, hope, fear, grief, and joy, are those that “arise immediately from good or evil, from pain or pleasure” that we experience or think about in prospect” (Hume’s Moral Philosophy). Similarly, David Hume argued that while some will utilize previous experiences to determine how they interact with the world around them, this is not an absolute truth because of the fact that they do not necessarily believe strongly one way or another. Overall, the idea Hume proposes is that by focusing on a specific piece of knowledge and then using a rational approach to determine a course of action can be problematic but that it helps create the sense of identity through action. The idea that he puts forth is that we are the sum of our ability to reason and the knowledge that we have accumulated to help us determine what is the best course of action when our passions dictate

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