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Enquiries Concerning The Human Understanding
Cód:
491_9781443774918
Philosophic writings are to be read with great caution. His pages, especially those of the Treatise, are so full of matter, he says so many different things in so many different ways and different connexions, and with so much indifference to what he has said before, that it is very hard to say positively that he taught, or did not teach, this or that particular doctrine. He applies the same principles to such a great taricty of subjects that it is not surprising that many verbal, and some real inconsistencies can be found in his statements. He is sinbitious rather than shy of saying the same thing in different ways, and at the same time he is often slovenly and indifferent about his words and formulae. This makes it easy to find all philosophies in Hume, or, by setting up one statement against another, none at all. Of Professor Grecns criticism of Hunle it is impossible to speak, here in Oxford, without the greatest respect. Apart from its philosophic import- ance, it is always serious and legitimate but it is also impossible not to feel that it would have been quite as important and a good deal shorter, if it had contained fewer of the verbal victories which are so easily won over Hume.
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