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Hume on Religion


Hume on Religion - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

Unless all evil is essential or necessary the religious position will collapse. Any degree or kind of unnecessary evil — however small — would ...

David Hume: Religion - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy

Hume is one of the first philosophers to systematically explore religion as a natural phenomenon, suggesting how religious belief can arise from natural, ...

Reflections on Hume on Religion | Adam Smith Works

Hume believed that accepting the fact of the existence of God is something a rational individual cannot deny. Speculating on the nature or ...

Hume on Religion - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

Hume's primary aim in The Natural History of Religion, as we have noted, is to show that the origin and foundations of religious belief does not ...

Was David Hume an Atheist? : r/askphilosophy - Reddit

He never explicitely says, but he certainly wasn't religious and was opposed to many religious dogmas, e.g. miracles, all-good beings, "bad" ...

Hume on religion, part 1: The agnostic philosopher | Julian Baggini

David Hume is the greatest philosopher Britain has produced and an intellectual hero to many atheists. His arguments against religion are clear, ...

Why was David Hume considered an atheist? - Quora

Hume was very critical of religion, and (being an empiricist) argued against intelligent design, as one could not observe god and therefore ...

What impact did David Hume have on the Christian faith?

Hume believed that most of our central beliefs about reality are impossible to support by means of reason. Religious claims are based on faith, ...

David Hume - Wikipedia

Hume's compatibilist theory of free will takes causal determinism as fully compatible with human freedom. ... His philosophy of religion, including his rejection ...

What is David Hume's idea of God? - Quora

Hume argues that an orderly universe does not necessarily prove the existence of God. Those who hold the opposing view claim that God is the ...

Hume's Inexplicable Mystery: His Views on Religion - jstor

Hume's "evidentialism," applied to religion, can be summed up by saying that it is unreasonable to accept a religious belief unless one has evidence for it.

Hume's conclusions on the existence and nature of God

I offer a reading of Hume's writings on religion which preserves the many criticisms of established religion that he voiced, but also reveals that Hume believed ...

Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion - Wikipedia

Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion is a philosophical work by the Scottish philosopher David Hume, first published in 1779.

Hume on religion, part 8: What did he believe? - The Guardian

Hume is so critical of religion that his refusal to simply come out as an atheist must have been the result of a simple fear of the troubles such a professed ...

Hume, David (1711–76) - Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy

Hume sees monotheistic religions to be intellectually less 'ridiculous' than the polytheism from which they develop, but to be, morally speaking, much worse.

Hume on Religion - Paul Russell - PhilArchive

David Hume's various writings concerning problems of religion are among the most important and influential contributions on this topic.

David Hume's Great Work on Religion Is Banned, Along with All His ...

The Christian religion not only was at first attended with miracles, but even at this day cannot be believed by any reasonable person ...

Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion - Project Gutenberg

Project Gutenberg's Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, by David Hume. This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no ...

David Hume on Religion (Part 1): Terminology, Structure and ...

Hume adopts a two-pronged assault on religious belief. First, he critiques the standard reasons and arguments offered for the existence of god.

Full article: Hume's Philosophy of Religion - Taylor & Francis Online

Thus in his essay “Idea of a Perfect Commonwealth,” he expressed a keen interest in political institutions, and aligned the church structure ...