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Philosophy General

Themes in Hume

The Self, the Will, Religion

by (author) Terence Penelhum

Publisher
Oxford University Press
Initial publish date
Mar 2004
Category
General
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780199266357
    Publish Date
    Mar 2004
    List Price
    $94.00
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780198238980
    Publish Date
    May 2000
    List Price
    $100.00

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Description

Terence Penelhum presents a selection of the best of his essays on Hume, most of them quite recent, and three of them not published elsewhere. The central themes of the book are selfhood, the will, and religious belief. Penelhum argues that Hume's sceptical conclusions on personal identity are based on conceptual confusions, but that the common charge of circularity made against him is unfounded. He examines the role Hume gives the idea of the self in his analysis of the passions, the dissonance between the account of the self in the first book of the Treatise of Human Nature and that found in the second, and the reasons for Hume's own dissatisfaction with his views on this theme. The essays on the will examine Hume's famous attacks on rationalist understandings of human motives, and try to expose the deficiencies in his 'compatibilist' interpretation of freedom. The discussion of Hume's views on religion relates them to his scepticism and to his doctrine of natural belief. Penelhum maintains that Hume's ultimate views on religion are to be found in the harshly negative judgements of the first Enquiry, which he did not ever see reason to modify. Penelhum's essays will be fascinating for all who work on these themes, whether from an eighteenth-century or a twentieth-century perspective.

About the author

Terence Penelhum is Professor of Philosophy and Religious Studies at the University of Calgary, and is a graduate of Edinburgh and Oxford. He has written Survival and Disembodied Existence, Religion and Rationality and Hume.

Terence Penelhum's profile page