Importance Of The Truth In Hamlet

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In the play, Hamlet, the characters are looking for the truth, and they each have their own understanding of truth and methods to arrive to it. Shakespeare tells a tale about revenge, family, filial obligation and devotion. It all begins when a ghost appears to hamlet, who is, supposedly, Hamlet 's dad (the king of Denmark). The ghost tells Hamlet how he dies and how Hamlet has to revenge his death, as he states “revenge his foul and most unnatural murder, sleeping within my orchard, my custom always of the afternoon, upon my secure hour thy uncle stole, with the juice of cursed hebona in a vital, and in porches of my ears did pour”.

Hamlet seeks the truth about his dad’s death through his madness, as he states “So help me god no matter how strange or weird I may appear or act, since, from now on, i might act like a madman”. Hamlet feels that he has to put on this “mask”, to break the appearances of others, who are being dishonest, evil and sneaky, in order to discover the truth. He then orchestrates a play to know, for sure, if Claudius (uncle), killed his father (king Hamlet), and when he sees the reaction from Claudius it ensures him of his evil doings. However, when hamlet gets the chance to kill Claudius, it’s while he’s in prayer and he decides not to do it, at that exact …show more content…

He believes that no knowledge can come before experiences, he only believes in posterior (knowledge after experiences). In An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, Hume’s analysis of the contents of experience before knowledge begins with the distinction between impressions and ideas. Impression being more lively perceptions with the help of our senses, and ideas are less lively perceptions that are copies of our impressions. For example, to feel pain is an impression, because that 's what you 're experiencing at that moment, whereas the memory of that pain is an idea; which makes Impression more vivid than ideas, and ideas

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