
According to Hume, many nonhuman animals (or beings whom he sometimes calls 'sensible creatures') are analogous to human beings in respects of the body and the mind. We are able to sympathise with an animal in similar ways we sympathise with another human being.
Copyright 2013 La Trobe University, all rights reserved. Please contact for permissions.
Nov 11, 2013
46 min

According to Hume, many nonhuman animals (or beings whom he sometimes calls 'sensible creatures') are analogous to human beings in respects of the body and the mind. We are able to sympathise with an animal in similar ways we sympathise with another human being.
Copyright 2013 La Trobe University, all rights reserved. Please contact for permissions.
Nov 11, 2013

‘Sympathy’ (or what is now often called ‘empathy’) is in Hume’s view a complex mechanism of the human mind which relies on the combined operation of three more fundamental principles: the ‘copy principle’, principle of ‘association of ideas’, and the principle of more vivid perceptions ‘enlivening’ less vivid associated perceptions.
Copyright 2013 La Trobe University, all rights reserved. Please contact for permissions.
Nov 11, 2013
47 min

‘Sympathy’ (or what is now often called ‘empathy’) is in Hume’s view a complex mechanism of the human mind which relies on the combined operation of three more fundamental principles: the ‘copy principle’, principle of ‘association of ideas’, and the principle of more vivid perceptions ‘enlivening’ less vivid associated perceptions.
Copyright 2013 La Trobe University, all rights reserved. Please contact for permissions.
Nov 11, 2013

According to Hume, all the objects of human inquiry and knowledge can be divided into two kinds (and only two kinds). They are 'relations of idea' on the one hand, which are discoverable by reason independent of real existence in the universe, and 'matters of fact' on the other, which are discoverable by experience.
Copyright 2013 La Trobe University, all rights reserved. Please contact for permissions.
Nov 11, 2013
50 min

According to Hume, all the objects of human inquiry and knowledge can be divided into two kinds (and only two kinds). They are 'relations of idea' on the one hand, which are discoverable by reason independent of real existence in the universe, and 'matters of fact' on the other, which are discoverable by experience.
Copyright 2013 La Trobe University, all rights reserved. Please contact for permissions.
Nov 11, 2013

What Hume calls the ‘association of ideas’ is a fundamental operating ‘principle’ (i.e. mechanism) of the human mind. The principle operates by resemblance, by contiguity, and by causes and effect.
Copyright 2013 La Trobe University, all rights reserved. Please contact for permissions.
Nov 11, 2013
47 min

What Hume calls the ‘association of ideas’ is a fundamental operating ‘principle’ (i.e. mechanism) of the human mind. The principle operates by resemblance, by contiguity, and by causes and effect.
Copyright 2013 La Trobe University, all rights reserved. Please contact for permissions.
Nov 11, 2013

Hume divides all 'perceptions' (i.e. experiences) into 'impressions' and 'ideas'. This theory device gives him a more finely grained account of the operations of the mind than either Locke or Descartes have. Impressions are original 'perceptions of the human mind' which are vivid, forceful, strong or lively. Ideas are the 'faint images' of the original impressions.
Copyright 2013 La Trobe University, all rights reserved. Please contact for permissions.
Nov 10, 2013
53 min

Hume divides all 'perceptions' (i.e. experiences) into 'impressions' and 'ideas'. This theory device gives him a more finely grained account of the operations of the mind than either Locke or Descartes have. Impressions are original 'perceptions of the human mind' which are vivid, forceful, strong or lively. Ideas are the 'faint images' of the original impressions.
Copyright 2013 La Trobe University, all rights reserved. Please contact for permissions.
Nov 10, 2013
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