Immanence without Reductionism, Irreducibility without Mysticism: A Reexamination of David Hume on Experience, Skepticism, and Custom

The history of interpretations surrounding David Hume’s epistemology has in great part resulted in a predominantly negative reputation for the thinker despite also an acknowledged significance and influence he holds in modern philosophy and various other developments of the time. Much of this has to...

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Main Author: Tan, Justin Randall
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Published: Archīum Ateneo 2019
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/theses-dissertations/369
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.theses-dissertations-14952021-09-27T03:00:04Z Immanence without Reductionism, Irreducibility without Mysticism: A Reexamination of David Hume on Experience, Skepticism, and Custom Tan, Justin Randall The history of interpretations surrounding David Hume’s epistemology has in great part resulted in a predominantly negative reputation for the thinker despite also an acknowledged significance and influence he holds in modern philosophy and various other developments of the time. Much of this has to do with the basic presupposition that he sought to employ skepticism in the name of finding a rigorous mechanistic standard of justification for human knowledge, even if to the point of atomistic extremity. Alternatives to this paradigm have indeed been put forward, but remain in some manner a relative minority to influencing the greater perception of Hume. This study hence explores both the source of uncharitable interpretations within Hume’s works on human understanding, as well as how such readings fall apart upon a closer inspection of the texts. The resulting worldview that emerge wildly differs from the dominant atomistic-mechanistic narrative, and even surpasses the implications drawn out by prior constructive readings: a radical but mitigated skeptical perspective that fearlessly internalizes the inexorable fallibility of knowledge, always taken in the immanent but irreducibly complex context of common practice and ordinary life, such as to exclude both the excessive reductionism of rigid epistemological verification and the wantonly obscure mystical tendencies of metaphysics. 2019-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/theses-dissertations/369 Theses and Dissertations (All) Archīum Ateneo n/a
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
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Tan, Justin Randall
Immanence without Reductionism, Irreducibility without Mysticism: A Reexamination of David Hume on Experience, Skepticism, and Custom
description The history of interpretations surrounding David Hume’s epistemology has in great part resulted in a predominantly negative reputation for the thinker despite also an acknowledged significance and influence he holds in modern philosophy and various other developments of the time. Much of this has to do with the basic presupposition that he sought to employ skepticism in the name of finding a rigorous mechanistic standard of justification for human knowledge, even if to the point of atomistic extremity. Alternatives to this paradigm have indeed been put forward, but remain in some manner a relative minority to influencing the greater perception of Hume. This study hence explores both the source of uncharitable interpretations within Hume’s works on human understanding, as well as how such readings fall apart upon a closer inspection of the texts. The resulting worldview that emerge wildly differs from the dominant atomistic-mechanistic narrative, and even surpasses the implications drawn out by prior constructive readings: a radical but mitigated skeptical perspective that fearlessly internalizes the inexorable fallibility of knowledge, always taken in the immanent but irreducibly complex context of common practice and ordinary life, such as to exclude both the excessive reductionism of rigid epistemological verification and the wantonly obscure mystical tendencies of metaphysics.
format text
author Tan, Justin Randall
author_facet Tan, Justin Randall
author_sort Tan, Justin Randall
title Immanence without Reductionism, Irreducibility without Mysticism: A Reexamination of David Hume on Experience, Skepticism, and Custom
title_short Immanence without Reductionism, Irreducibility without Mysticism: A Reexamination of David Hume on Experience, Skepticism, and Custom
title_full Immanence without Reductionism, Irreducibility without Mysticism: A Reexamination of David Hume on Experience, Skepticism, and Custom
title_fullStr Immanence without Reductionism, Irreducibility without Mysticism: A Reexamination of David Hume on Experience, Skepticism, and Custom
title_full_unstemmed Immanence without Reductionism, Irreducibility without Mysticism: A Reexamination of David Hume on Experience, Skepticism, and Custom
title_sort immanence without reductionism, irreducibility without mysticism: a reexamination of david hume on experience, skepticism, and custom
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2019
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/theses-dissertations/369
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