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Isaac Chan
is on page 78 of 304
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governed by the same maxims as the vulgar, especially in the active parts of life.
(I can also see now how deeply seeped in scholasticism the pre-Cartesians were, with their dogma of the superiority of human reason; and this allows me to see how compatible Aristotelianism is with Christianity, which made it so popular.)
— Feb 26, 2026 03:42AM
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governed by the same maxims as the vulgar, especially in the active parts of life.
(I can also see now how deeply seeped in scholasticism the pre-Cartesians were, with their dogma of the superiority of human reason; and this allows me to see how compatible Aristotelianism is with Christianity, which made it so popular.)
Isaac Chan
is on page 78 of 304
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less prestigious university, or people who speak in a heavy accent. I do not necessarily possess any superior insight into the 'real', deeper nature of things than anyone else - we are all bound by analogical reasoning and induction.
A Platonist might hold that philosophers are intellectually superior to others due to our deeper understanding of the Forms, but a Humean humbly realises that we are ...
— Feb 26, 2026 03:42AM
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less prestigious university, or people who speak in a heavy accent. I do not necessarily possess any superior insight into the 'real', deeper nature of things than anyone else - we are all bound by analogical reasoning and induction.
A Platonist might hold that philosophers are intellectually superior to others due to our deeper understanding of the Forms, but a Humean humbly realises that we are ...
Isaac Chan
is on page 77 of 304
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goes to Dr Millican, as always.
'On the reason of animals' was humbling not just on an inter-species level, but on an intra level as well. If all living things possess but the same animalistic mode of reasoning, then there is zero justification for me to feel superior about my own reasoning compared to certain groups of people, e.g. people who may have less formal education than I have, or attended a ...
— Feb 26, 2026 03:41AM
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goes to Dr Millican, as always.
'On the reason of animals' was humbling not just on an inter-species level, but on an intra level as well. If all living things possess but the same animalistic mode of reasoning, then there is zero justification for me to feel superior about my own reasoning compared to certain groups of people, e.g. people who may have less formal education than I have, or attended a ...
Isaac Chan
is on page 77 of 304
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the Treatise. But my challenge to Hume last night was that he must now explain why humans are so intellectually superior to the beasts. And I read this morning that Hume answers this in his endnote: I will read it tonight. Ha.
I would not have known that Darwin's personal notes show that he read 'On the reason of animals' around the time that he was embarking in his groundbreaking revolution. The credit...
— Feb 26, 2026 03:40AM
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the Treatise. But my challenge to Hume last night was that he must now explain why humans are so intellectually superior to the beasts. And I read this morning that Hume answers this in his endnote: I will read it tonight. Ha.
I would not have known that Darwin's personal notes show that he read 'On the reason of animals' around the time that he was embarking in his groundbreaking revolution. The credit...
Isaac Chan
is on page 77 of 304
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reasoning (there must be a medium). I wonder if Hume even realised this fallacy in his reasoning.
Also, I am smugly feeling like a philosophical genius now, because I accurately anticipated the key objection to Hume's 'Of the reason of animals'. I had accepted Hume's argument that humans possess merely the same mode of reasoning as the beasts (i.e. analogical reasoning and custom) since my reading of ...
— Feb 26, 2026 03:40AM
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reasoning (there must be a medium). I wonder if Hume even realised this fallacy in his reasoning.
Also, I am smugly feeling like a philosophical genius now, because I accurately anticipated the key objection to Hume's 'Of the reason of animals'. I had accepted Hume's argument that humans possess merely the same mode of reasoning as the beasts (i.e. analogical reasoning and custom) since my reading of ...
Isaac Chan
is on page 77 of 304
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in non-humans, I cannot infer that this means that homosexuality SHOULD be allowed among humans. There is a missing link from the premise to the conclusion.) So Hume's approach runs into the is-ought problem as well. I observe that all ideas correspond with an impression, yes, but I cannot rush to the conclusion that every idea SHOULD correspond with an impression! There is a missing link in the logical ...
— Feb 26, 2026 03:39AM
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in non-humans, I cannot infer that this means that homosexuality SHOULD be allowed among humans. There is a missing link from the premise to the conclusion.) So Hume's approach runs into the is-ought problem as well. I observe that all ideas correspond with an impression, yes, but I cannot rush to the conclusion that every idea SHOULD correspond with an impression! There is a missing link in the logical ...
Isaac Chan
is on page 76 of 304
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experience, i.e. doing experiments and not relying on metaphysical speculation and armchair theorizing.
I wonder if this approach has philosophical grounding. For example, there is the is-ought problem, of course expounded by Hume himself! When I observe a set of phenomena of what IS, pure reason cannot infer from that observation of what SHOULD be! (e.g. when I observe that homosexual behaviour occurs...
— Feb 26, 2026 03:38AM
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experience, i.e. doing experiments and not relying on metaphysical speculation and armchair theorizing.
I wonder if this approach has philosophical grounding. For example, there is the is-ought problem, of course expounded by Hume himself! When I observe a set of phenomena of what IS, pure reason cannot infer from that observation of what SHOULD be! (e.g. when I observe that homosexual behaviour occurs...
Isaac Chan
is on page 76 of 304
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cleanse our reasonings with analogical reasoning, i.e. ranking the quality of the evidence of our reasoning by how closely they resemble the original object. A clearer example of what I mean by how Hume directly imposes positivity into normativity is that he deduces that all human knowledge is grounded in experience, then the takeaway of this philosophy is that all human knowledge SHOULD be grounded in ...
— Feb 26, 2026 03:37AM
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cleanse our reasonings with analogical reasoning, i.e. ranking the quality of the evidence of our reasoning by how closely they resemble the original object. A clearer example of what I mean by how Hume directly imposes positivity into normativity is that he deduces that all human knowledge is grounded in experience, then the takeaway of this philosophy is that all human knowledge SHOULD be grounded in ...
Isaac Chan
is on page 76 of 304
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1 key observation from Hume's epistemology thus far is that he seems to be deducing a positive philosophy of human reasoning, and then he imposes that positive deduction into the normative sphere. What I mean is that he (probably correctly) concludes that all our reasonings concerning matters of fact are grounded in analogical reasoning and custom, then the takeaway for this deduction is that we should ...
— Feb 26, 2026 03:36AM
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1 key observation from Hume's epistemology thus far is that he seems to be deducing a positive philosophy of human reasoning, and then he imposes that positive deduction into the normative sphere. What I mean is that he (probably correctly) concludes that all our reasonings concerning matters of fact are grounded in analogical reasoning and custom, then the takeaway for this deduction is that we should ...
Isaac Chan
is on page 75 of 304
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It is obvious to me that God loves us and knows us so well as his people, that he granted us free will, but at the same time he already knows what choices we will freely make, like how a father knows his children will choose candy over plain bread.
— Feb 25, 2026 06:10AM
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It is obvious to me that God loves us and knows us so well as his people, that he granted us free will, but at the same time he already knows what choices we will freely make, like how a father knows his children will choose candy over plain bread.
Isaac Chan
is on page 75 of 304
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circumstances. That does not mean they were determined to make said choices! I also KNOW (in the common, natural language sense of the word) that my boss would be furious if I slapped him across the face, and I KNOW that I will get fired if I slapped GMD across the face, but that doesn't mean they are determined to happen.
— Feb 25, 2026 06:10AM
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circumstances. That does not mean they were determined to make said choices! I also KNOW (in the common, natural language sense of the word) that my boss would be furious if I slapped him across the face, and I KNOW that I will get fired if I slapped GMD across the face, but that doesn't mean they are determined to happen.
Isaac Chan
is on page 75 of 304
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influenced Hume which influenced Smith.
And in response to ii), Hume says that it is a 'mystery', to evade accusations of heresy.
As a theist, I never really bought into the view that God having perfect foreknowledge means that all events must necessarily be determined. It is obvious to me, that if I know a person extremely well, let's say Joyce, I would know what they would choose to do in certain ...
— Feb 25, 2026 06:09AM
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influenced Hume which influenced Smith.
And in response to ii), Hume says that it is a 'mystery', to evade accusations of heresy.
As a theist, I never really bought into the view that God having perfect foreknowledge means that all events must necessarily be determined. It is obvious to me, that if I know a person extremely well, let's say Joyce, I would know what they would choose to do in certain ...
Isaac Chan
is on page 75 of 304
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action is right or wrong, because pure reason seemingly only tells us that there is no moral responsibility due to the deterministic argument), we must adopt a sentimentalist moral philosophy, which Hume, of course, does, and which I am looking forward to reading in the 'Enquiry concerning the principle of morals'. To my knowledge, Hutcheson pioneered this sort of sentimentalist moral philosophy, which ...
— Feb 25, 2026 06:09AM
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action is right or wrong, because pure reason seemingly only tells us that there is no moral responsibility due to the deterministic argument), we must adopt a sentimentalist moral philosophy, which Hume, of course, does, and which I am looking forward to reading in the 'Enquiry concerning the principle of morals'. To my knowledge, Hutcheson pioneered this sort of sentimentalist moral philosophy, which ...
Isaac Chan
is on page 74 of 304
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response to i) - this may be the conclusion from abstract philosophical reasoning, but our 'sublime reflections' crumble under the heated emotions of blame or a moral crisis. I can certainly attest to this - many times have all my profound reflections vanished when I am in a crisis or in great pain. Since, in practice, all moral reasoning are grounded in the passions (our emotions tell us whether an ...
— Feb 25, 2026 06:08AM
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response to i) - this may be the conclusion from abstract philosophical reasoning, but our 'sublime reflections' crumble under the heated emotions of blame or a moral crisis. I can certainly attest to this - many times have all my profound reflections vanished when I am in a crisis or in great pain. Since, in practice, all moral reasoning are grounded in the passions (our emotions tell us whether an ...
Isaac Chan
is on page 74 of 304
Note 2/n:
compatible with morality, but necessary for it: because we can only ascribe moral responsibility to a durable character. This hardly solves the problem of moral accountability, however, hence -
2 objections: i) There is NO moral responsibility because everything has already been predetermined, ii) The prime mover is the author of all sin (basically the problem of evil).
Hume raises a great point in ...
— Feb 25, 2026 06:07AM
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compatible with morality, but necessary for it: because we can only ascribe moral responsibility to a durable character. This hardly solves the problem of moral accountability, however, hence -
2 objections: i) There is NO moral responsibility because everything has already been predetermined, ii) The prime mover is the author of all sin (basically the problem of evil).
Hume raises a great point in ...
Isaac Chan
is on page 74 of 304
Note 1/n:
I finally see now how Hume is a compatibilist - well first of all, he accepts/ borrows Aquinas's prime mover argument. It is clear that everything has a cause, and every cause has a cause ..... going down this infinite regress of causes we can deduce that there was a prime mover.
But how can there be moral responsibility if everything was predetermined?
Hume says that this determinism is not only ...
— Feb 25, 2026 06:06AM
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I finally see now how Hume is a compatibilist - well first of all, he accepts/ borrows Aquinas's prime mover argument. It is clear that everything has a cause, and every cause has a cause ..... going down this infinite regress of causes we can deduce that there was a prime mover.
But how can there be moral responsibility if everything was predetermined?
Hume says that this determinism is not only ...
Edi
is 50% done
La raison, pierre angulaire de la méthode scientifique n’est pas fiable et ne permet pas de faire de lien cause-effet. En fait, il est impossible d’établir un lien de causation selon Hume.
— Feb 23, 2026 09:52PM
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Isaac Chan
is on page 72 of 304
Note n/n:
it feels like we can reach any radical philosophical conclusion of our fancy as long as we can think of sufficiently neat definitions.
— Feb 23, 2026 06:41AM
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it feels like we can reach any radical philosophical conclusion of our fancy as long as we can think of sufficiently neat definitions.
Isaac Chan
is on page 72 of 304
Note 4/n:
definitions. Wtf is the good in this form of linguistic wordplay?
It's like how he first defines an idea to be a copy of an impression, and then proceeds at breakneck speed to search for the corresponding impression of every single idea and discard ideas whose impressions cannot be readily identified as meaningless .....
— Feb 23, 2026 06:41AM
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definitions. Wtf is the good in this form of linguistic wordplay?
It's like how he first defines an idea to be a copy of an impression, and then proceeds at breakneck speed to search for the corresponding impression of every single idea and discard ideas whose impressions cannot be readily identified as meaningless .....
Isaac Chan
is on page 71 of 304
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free will - do I even know how crushing it is to REALLY understand the implications of determinism? The only outcome can be a futile devastation like Sergeant Slick. I must be like Rex and Cody - ignorant of the truth (whatever it may be), but focused on worldly missions to achieve worldly success.
Also, much of Hume's arguments regarding liberty and necessity are obviously just playing around with ...
— Feb 23, 2026 06:40AM
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free will - do I even know how crushing it is to REALLY understand the implications of determinism? The only outcome can be a futile devastation like Sergeant Slick. I must be like Rex and Cody - ignorant of the truth (whatever it may be), but focused on worldly missions to achieve worldly success.
Also, much of Hume's arguments regarding liberty and necessity are obviously just playing around with ...
Isaac Chan
is on page 70 of 304
Note 2/n:
discussions, I reflected on how the problem of free will has really never been a foremost philosophical interest of mine. It is also fitting that I watched Ep16 - Season 1 of 'The clone wars' yesterday, with the profound opening crawl 'Truth enlightens the mind, but won't always bring happiness to your heart'. I feel like there is really nothing much to gain with too much penetration into the problem of ...
— Feb 23, 2026 06:39AM
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discussions, I reflected on how the problem of free will has really never been a foremost philosophical interest of mine. It is also fitting that I watched Ep16 - Season 1 of 'The clone wars' yesterday, with the profound opening crawl 'Truth enlightens the mind, but won't always bring happiness to your heart'. I feel like there is really nothing much to gain with too much penetration into the problem of ...
Isaac Chan
is on page 70 of 304
Note 1/n:
According to many sources, Hume is obviously a compatibilist, so idk why tf Millican notes here that Hume 'is showing that his determinist worldview is compatible with morality'. I read Hume's arguments until I fell asleep last night and I still don't know how this determinism is compatible with morality, if every action that a person will ever do is already predetermined before his birth.
Through these...
— Feb 23, 2026 06:39AM
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According to many sources, Hume is obviously a compatibilist, so idk why tf Millican notes here that Hume 'is showing that his determinist worldview is compatible with morality'. I read Hume's arguments until I fell asleep last night and I still don't know how this determinism is compatible with morality, if every action that a person will ever do is already predetermined before his birth.
Through these...








