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"Hume as historian"

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Blogger BobC said...

Surely Hume understood that historical causation can't be plausibly seen as reducible to what happens when billiard balls collide. At some level, he must have understood that historical causation is in important ways 'real'; that historical causation is more than just a notion that accounts for perceived regularities.

My guess is that Hume flinched. Getting his arms around historical causation would have raised too many issues with is basic epistemology. He didn't want to go there.

Which makes me think that Hume's real reason for writing his mediocre histories was that he needed the money. Is that likely?

April 2, 2011 at 8:31 AM

Anonymous Jim Harrison said...

I read Hume's history something like thirty years ago so my impressions of it have faded. I do remember that I was surprised that anybody could manage to keep up such a high standard of good English prose through so many pages and centuries. I wish I still a copy of the history: I read a lot of English history and was extremely impressed by Pincus' 1688, but the knowledge you acquire from traditional narrative histories remains very useful if you aren't going to lose the thread in the midst of all the interpreting and reinterpreting one encounters in contemporary works. On the other hand, six volumes of kings and battles, however good, is more than plenty.

I do believe that Hume had a financial motive in turning to history. Then as now, philosophy doesn't pay very well.

April 2, 2011 at 1:24 PM

Blogger Dan Little said...

Jim and Bob, thanks for your good comments. RE the financial necessity argument -- Hume's biography -- eg here http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/hume/ -- doesn't really suggest financial distress as a primary cause. He took a virtually unpaid position as Librarian to the Edinburgh Faculty of Advocates chiefly in order to have access to materials necessary for writing the history, and he spent 6 years in the effort. So it seems likely that he found historical writing worthwhile. (That said, the book did earn a lot of money!)

As for Bob's point about causation -- Hume seems always to have been highly consistent in his philosophical beliefs. So it doesn't really seem plausible that he would simply give historical or social causes a "pass" -- unless he thought they were different from natural causes. This is perhaps suggested in the final phrase, where he says "it is easy to assign the reason of the destruction" -- perhaps he means this is observable causal connection rather than mysterious occult causal power.

April 2, 2011 at 4:55 PM

Anonymous Will said...

"Hume seems always to have been highly consistent in his philosophical beliefs."

While I would agree in general, I'd take issue with that "always." Especially with regard to causation, Hume sometimes failed to follow the implications of his radical skepticism. In his essay, "On Miracles," Hume actually directly contradicts his thesis from "On Causation," arguing that because natural laws always pair certain causes and effects (e.g., a fatal blow is paired with subsequent permanent death), claims of miracles (e.g., a person fatally wounded returns to life) violate natural laws, and should be rejected outright for that reason.

April 5, 2011 at 8:50 PM

Blogger BobC said...

In important ways Hume was an early psychologist. His epistemology was - at bottom - an empirical theory of how the mind worked.

Hume wasn't so much a skeptic as someone proposing a testable hypothesis about how minds. That hypotheiss stood or fell not on how well it answered philosphical questions of his day (it by-passed them), but rather on how well it reflected every day experience.

April 7, 2011 at 9:14 AM

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