(Knowledge,—its
conditions and limits)
The interest with which
Hume entered on philosophical studies appears from his correspondence. '
I began to consider seriously how I should proceed in my philosophical
enquiries. I found that the moral philosophy, transmitted to us by
antiquity, laboured under the same inconvenience that has been found in
their natural philosophy, of being entirely hypothetical, and depending
more upon invention than experience, . . . without regarding human
nature. This, therefore, I resolved to make my principal study, and the
source from which I would derive every truth in criticism, as well as in
morality.'
At the age of
twenty-five, in the retreat he had selected in France, he began
philosophical research with the enthusiasm of one who had found his
life-work. The title chosen for his work was 'A Treatise of Human Nature
: being an attempt to introduce the experimental method of reasoning
into moral subjects.' It thus appears that 'the experimental method' was
that which allured him to independent study, and which held out the
prospect of fresh ' discovery,' even as in physical research. His field
of study was 'human nature'; his basis, 'experience'; his method an
observational enquiry into the intellectual conditions on which a
knowledge of things is acquired by us. His main enquiry, therefore, was
concerned with the origin of our thoughts and fancies and feelings as to
things around us.
The chief interest to us
in Hume's philosophy centres in its distinctive feature, his brave and
exclusive reliance on Experience. Its strength and its weakness are to
be traced to its root. My purpose is to sketch his system as clearly and
carefully as I may find possible within the limits. If I succeed in
presenting Hume as he really was in the field of philosophy, my leading
purpose will be gained. I shall then be willing to leave to the reader
the more extended criticism which seems desirable.
His basis was Experience;
this always, this only. What he sought was an interpretation of human
nature by reference to our experience, aided by a keen sceptical outlook
against assumptions, inventions, and hypotheses. These were the evils
which had at all stages involved philosophy in confusion, exposing its
systems to ridicule. David J Hume's accepted task was to rid philosophy
of these evils, placing before thinking men a simple and complete
exposition of human experience, guarded at every point by an
unhesitating and bold scepticism as to everything that proposes to go a
step beyond Experience. This is the true significance of ' Hume's
scepticism.' If the reader keep this description well in view from the
first, he will have a fair chance of understanding Hume better than he
has commonly been understood in his native land.
A safe and sure basis for
philosophy we certainly have in Experience. All knowledge must begin in
Experience, and all knowledge must be within Experience. Even thus,
however, our difficulties are only beginning. We may speak of the
simplicity of Experience, but the conditions of our knowledge are not
simple, nor are they easily interpreted. Hume sees this from the outset,
saying in the introduction to his Treatise, 'If truth be at all within
the reach of human capacity, it is certain it must be very deep and
abstruse; and to hope we shall arrive at it without pains, while the
greatest geniuses have failed with the utmost pains, must certainly be
esteemed sufficiently vain and presumptuous.' It is in fact easy to say,
' we shall keep to experience'; but to set forth all that is involved
within ' common experience' is no easy task. Owning this, Hume shut
himself off from his ordinary surroundings, and, retreating to France,
devoted himself to three years of the closest observation and
reflection. It was no light thing he resolved upon, and he was ready for
any sacrifice, animated by the expectation that there lay within his
reach discoveries which would have permanent value. Expectations are not
always fulfilled, but brave resolves are ever to be honoured, and they
have ever reward in their execution, — though readers may doubt whether
' experience' sustains this view of life's efforts.
Everyone can see from
what directions difficulties must come, when he considers the wide
sphere of existence in which we have our place, and the conditions under
which we interpret the facts of experience. Hume does not mean that the
universe lies within an individual's experience; he only asks how far
the universe can be understood by reference to our experience. Hume does
not mean that our senses, being essentially like those of the animals,
are the measure of reality; he asks what interpretation we put on our
impressions by use of our understanding. Accordingly, the entire first
volume on his Treatise, extending to 475 pages, is 'of the
understanding'; and all through it there run references to 'unknown
causes,' and to 'particular causes of particular events,' while he holds
that the actual relation between cause and effect never comes within our
experience. These few references are enough to shew through what an
African thicket the path of exploration must be cut.
He begins with 'the
perceptions of the human mind'; the outlook a man has on his
surroundings; what is the origin of his 'perceptions'? how does he
perceive things? how is he affected by things? The physiology of nerve
and brain was unknown when Hume set to work. This field of research was
therefore closed to him, though he did much to turn attention in its
direction. Witness Reid's Inquiry into the Human Mind, on the Principles
of Cotnmon Sense (1763), with his discussion of the organs of sense, and
of the impressions made on them, largely suggested by Hume's Treatise.
Hume speaks of
perceptions 'entering' the mind, dwelling on the manner in which 'they
strike upon the mind' and 'make their way into our thought and
consciousness.' These phrases seem almost to suggest that perceptions
are made outside, and force their way into an inner consciousness where
they are stored. Nothing so crude as this is intended. He is only
encountering the disadvantages of popular usage. His defence is given
later, when he writes, ' It is very difficult to talk of the operations
of the mind with perfect propriety and exactness, because common
language has seldom made any very nice distinctions between them' (p.
187).
The historic position was
such as to involve philosophical research in needless perplexity.
Locke's great essay On the Human Understanding held the field, having
run through five editions before Hume entered on his philosophical
enquiries. Locke, having first expended his force on a polemic against
'innate ideas,' had insisted that 'all the materials of reason and
knowledge' come 'from Experience,' that observation is 'employed either
about external sensible objects or about the internal operations of our
minds,' that the mind may be regarded as ' white paper void of all
characters,' that ideas are the figures 'which the busy and boundless
fancy of man has painted on it,' and that 'all ideas come from Sensation
and Reflection.' Our Senses 'convey into the mind several distinct
perceptions of things,' and Reflection, which is 'the notice the mind
takes of its own operations,' 'furnishes the understanding with another
set of ideas, which could not be had from things without.' Hume takes
Locke's standpoint, acknowledges our dependence on Experience only, and
entering with the freshness of youthful enthusiasm into the enquiry as
to the origin of our ideas on the conditions implied, he works out his
scheme of association under the sway of custom, develops his doctrine of
ignorance of matter, of mind, and of causality, presenting a philosophic
scepticism as the outcome. In this his grand service is an exposure of
the inherent weakness of an empirical philosophy. Locke's Essay was an
epoch-making book; Hume's Treatise prepared the way for a new and
grander epoch in the history of the science of man. With such tracings
the reader may follow readily the unfolding of Hume's ' system,' of
which he speaks so confidingly and confidently as the discussion
proceeds.
What does Experience
mean—your experience and mine? How does there originate out of this
simple source all the variety of relations belonging to it? How can we
by interpretation of it reach a science of human nature? These are
Hume's grand questions. In seeking an answer, he hopes to achieve large
discoveries in philosophy. His search is first for the simple elements
of our experience,—next for the origin of the strange complexity which
it involves,—and ultimately for the philosophy of existence possible to
us within its limits. 'The subjects of the understanding and passions
make a complete chain of reasoning by themselves'; and beyond these lies
'the examination of morals, politics, and criticism.' These, taken
together, give his general survey of the field of research.
The primary element of
Experience is Impression. 'This arises in the soul originally, from
unknown causes ' (22). 'An impression first strikes upon the senses and
makes us perceive heat or cold, thirst or hunger, pleasure or pain of
some kind or other ' (22). Under this name are included ' all our
sensations, passions, and emotions, as they make their first appearance
in the soul' (12). He thus distinguishes between an outer and an inner
source of impression. All that can be said as to their rise is that '
they strike upon the mind, and make their way into our thought or
consciousness' (12). Impressions 'are all so The bracketed figures
refer to the pages of the 1st Ed. (in 3 vols.)
It is clear and evident,
that they admit of no controversy' (65). Here is no room for doubt. Our
consciousness of impression leaves no place for question or appeal. '
The extent and force of the human understanding ' (4) still lies beyond
this, involving wider questions. When Experience is taken in its utmost
simplicity, all that can be said is that we are conscious of some
feeling ; and ' every one of himself will readily perceive the
difference between feeling and thinking' (12). Even at this early stage
we are dealing with a set of words of which we have no interpretation,
such as ' consciousness,' ' understanding,' 'thought,' 'mind,' 'soul';
but it does not seem possible to make our statements without being
allowed their provisional use. Whether these also admit of no
controversy is not as yet determined. We have only before us the primary
form of ' the perceptions of the human mind,'—impressions coming through
the senses or from within our nature itself. But in naming them so, he •
would not be understood to express the manner in which our lively
perceptions are produced in the soul, but merely the perceptions
themselves.' These impressions are fleeting. They ' make their way into
consciousness' and then vanish, to be followed by others. Are they then
utterly lost as particular feelings, having had only a momentary
existence ? Assuredly not. The experience of which they are the primary
phase, includes more than this, as a consequence, we may say. ' In
thinking and reasoning,' ideas arise in the mind. These are ' the faint
images of our sensations, passions, and emotions, as they .make their
first appearance in the soul.' In this use of the term ' Idea,' there is
a departure from Locke's usage, who took ' Idea' as the term to include
all the phenomena in consciousness. In thus departing from Locke's
usage, he says—' Perhaps I rather restore the word, idea, to its
original sense, from which Mr Locke had perverted it, in making it stand
for all our impressions ' (13, note).; What then are these ' Ideas,' and
what the conditions of their origin ? How are ' the faint images ' of
our impressions produced? They are not fading impressions; they take the
place of vanished impressions, which had greater ' force and liveliness'
while they lasted. 'Of the impression there is a copy taken by the mind,
which remains after the impression ceases; and this we call an idea'
(22). Impressions 'are copied by the memory and imagination, and become
ideas' (22). This involves divergence from the 'white paper' theory as
if nature made an impression on a sensitive surface. The theory suggests
an activity of mind in producing a copy; and it is added that the ideal
has less 'force and liveliness,' is 'faint and low,' and ' when it
entirely loses that vivacity' which characterises impressions, it ' is a
perfect idea' (24). Hume does not deal with the question how - the mind
makes the copy. He takes it merely as a fact within our experience.
Subsequent references throughout his first volume are consistent with
those now quoted, but do not add any thing by way of explanation. Under
the action of Memory and Imagination, 'an impression again makes its
appearance as an idea' (23). Memory 'preserves the original form in
which its objects were presented' (25). Ideas are spoken of as 'adequate
representations of objects' (58). Somewhat more definite is the
reference to the ' judgments of our senses» (89), which, it is admitted,
' undergo correction.' On the other hand, Hume speaks of ' two bodies
presenting themselves,' and yet he is careful to repeat—' My philosophy
pretends only to explain the nature and causes of our perceptions, or
impressions and ideas' (118). While perceptions are said to ' make their
way into our thought or consciousness,' he represents this as 'a mere
passive admission of the impressions through the organs of sensation'
(133).
The next advance is the
noting of similarity between Impressions and Ideas. 'The first
circumstance that strikes my eye is the great resemblance betwixt our
impressions and ideas in every other particular, except their degree of
force and vivacity. The one seem to be in a manner the reflection of the
other, so that all the perceptions of the mind are double, and appear
both as impressions and ideas ' (13). 'This circumstance seems to me
remarkable' (14). He dwells upon it with special interest, regarding it
as in some sense a ' discovery,' and of the first importance. 'The Ideas
I form are exact representations of the impressions I felt'; ' these two
species of perception are exactly correspondent' (16); and there is a
'constant conjunction of resembling impressions.' If there is ' a copy
taken by the mind,' it seems a natural result that there should be a
resemblance. But Hume is arrested by the 'constant conjunction ' of the
two things as if it were settled by the nature of the mind that the copy
must follow the impression, so that the perceptions of the mind by a
provision of nature are invariably double. And we ' find by constant
experience, that the simple impressions always take the precedence of
their correspondent ideas ' (17). At a later stage we find him repeat
his view of the importance of all this. ' No discovery could have been
made more happily for deciding all controversies concerning ideas than
that above mentioned, that impressions always take the precedency of
them, and that every idea with which the imagination is furnished, first
makes its appearance in a correspondent impression' (65). The lack of
explanation of how the copy is taken proves a serious disadvantage now,
even when we grant the doubleness, and the uniformity of sequence, and
add that ' all our simple ideas in their first appearance are derived
from simple impressions' (16).
But Hume recognises that
it becomes needful to distinguish between simple and complex in our
perceptions. 'Upon a more accurate survey I find I have been carried
away too far by the first appearance, and that I must make use of the
distinction of perceptions into simple and complex, to limit this
general decision, that all our ideas and impressions are resembling'
(14). This leads to a modification of view, shewing how much must depend
on the explanation to be given of how the 'copy' is made. 'I observe
that many of our complex ideas never had impressions that correspond to
them; and that many of our complex impressions never are exactly copied
in ideas' (15). For example, the idea we have of the ' New Jerusalem '
or of ' Paris.' He then feels constrained to admit that ' the rule is
not universally true, that they are exact copies of each other ' (15).
This suggests that nature does not provide for ' double perceptions '
though the phenomena are dual; and that the later phrase, 'judgments of
the senses 'is truer to experience than the statement that 'there is a
copy of the impression taken by the mind.' Both statements, however,
imply an activity of mind somewhat obscured by the references to
'resemblance ' and 'correspondence.' Our author, nevertheless, continues
attracted by the 'discovery' of resemblance; and he ' ventures to affirm
that the rule holds without exception ' in the case of 'simple
perceptions.' 'Every simple impression has a correspondent idea' (15).
But even here the suggestion of 'representation,' 'image,' 'copy,' is
not easily supported by reference to 'experience.' The idea of red
'is taken as an example, but we find it more difficult to form ' an idea
of red,' than an idea of ' a red apple,' and even on this point ideas
will differ according as we are more familiar with the Scotch apple or
with the American. Hume's modification of his view by reference to
complex perceptions, seems to apply even to simple perceptions, so far,
at least, as to awaken doubt as to his first position that ' the
difference between impressions and ideas consists in the degrees of
force and liveliness with which they strike upon the mind' (11).
The complexity of
Experience opens out still further. Even impressions must be
distinguished as ' those of Sensation and those of Reflexion ' (22). The
first kind arises in the soul originally from unknown causes. The second
is derived in a great measure from our ideas, and that in -the following
order. An impression first strikes upon the senses, and makes us
perceive . . . pleasure or pain of some kind or other. Of this
impression there is a copy taken by the mind, which remains after the
impression ceases. This idea of pleasure or pain, when it returns upon
the soul, produces the new impressions of desire and aversion, hope and
fear, which may properly be called impressions of reflexion, because
derived from it. These again are copied by the memory and imagination,
and become ideas; which perhaps in their turn give rise to other
impressions and ideas. So that the impressions of reflexion are
antecedent to their correspondent ideas, but posterior to the ideas of
sensation and derived from them.' This passage is not too long for its
purpose, for the complexity described belongs to the common experience,
quite apart from philosophy. This double relation of thought to feeling
is such that at one time thought depends on feeling; at another, feeling
depends on thought. The first feeling comes to us, we know not how ; the
second is awakened by our thought. This complexity seems to present to
view the whole range of enquiry. Hume is so impressed by it that it
leads him even to change the order of investigation so far as to pass '
impressions ' in order to treat of ' ideas.' The inducement is curiously
explained. 'As the impressions of reflection, viz., passions, desires
and emotions, which principally deserve our attention arise mostly from
ideas, it will be necessary to reverse that method which, at first
sight, seems most natural; and in order to explain the nature and
principles of the human mind, give a particular account of ideas before
we proceed to impressions. For this reason I have here chosen to begin
with ideas' (23). This is a temptation springing from his ultimate
object—' an attempt to introduce the experimental method of reasoning
into moral subjects.' But the philosopher who declares that ' the only
solid foundation we can give to the science of man must be laid on
experience and observation' (6), becomes bound to keep by the natural
order of experience, in order to read accurately its testimony. If
nature has so ordered our experience that all perceptions are doubly,
and those of sense ' always take the precedence of their correspondent
ideas,' this deviation from the natural order is a mistake, and is
likely to throw the ' system' into confusion. The significance of the
complexity is, however, to be seriously considered. It involves a
dualism in the history of impressions. There are ' impressions of
sensation ' coming from without, which ' strike upon the senses '; and
there are impressions from within, ' desires and emotions,' depending on
reflection. ' The examination of our sensations belongs more to
anatomists and natural philosophers than to moral'(23); but, when 'they
make their way into consciousness,' it is quite otherwise, for it
remains true that ' all impressions are internal and perishing
existences' (339), having their place within us in accordance with
conditions of consciousness. After having remarked the ' constant
conjunction' of impressions and ideas, and having found in this an order
of dependence, inasmuch as we ' find by constant experience that the
simple impressions always take the precedence of their correspondent
ideas, but never appear in the contrary order' (17), it seems a singular
deviation from the natural order to ' give a particular account of ideas
before we proceed to impressions ' (23). In consequence the treatment '
of the impressions of the senses and memory' is delayed till Part III.,
section 5, p. 151. This determination 'to begin with ideas' affects
seriously the structure of the Treatise.
The effect on the
development of the theory is to present Empiricism in a more trying
light. The field of life's activity is illuminated by impressions,
external and internal; all ideas are dependent on them; ' innate ideas'
are, therefore, excluded (21). Impressions are unaccounted for; they
are, however, classified, according to their source, as external or
internal; how they arise is unknown to us (a physiology of the senses
and of organic sensibilities not being at command). The main
difficulties are now full in view,—how have impressions their '
correspondent ideas'; how do these ideas subsist as a system; how are
those relations essential to the scheme of knowledge originated and
maintained ; and how does this scheme stand related to the system of
things we name the universe ? With nothing more than impressions and
their copies to work with, a faint outline of the sceptical result is
already shining through this description of our experience. Its income
pleteness involves its insecurity, and this means doubt. In this study
of ' the extent and force of the human understanding,' the theory that
mind is as 'white paper, void of all characters' is being discredited ;
and the theory that it is as 'a copying-press' does not show to
advantage.* We need to ascertain by direct observation 'the force of the
human understanding.'
The first question is,
How have impressions their ' correspondent ideas' ? To 'give a
particular account of ideas, before we proceed to impressions,' is 'to
reverse' the natural order. It is to act as the builder who proceeds
with the structure before he has made sure of the foundation. To delay
the primary question from Part I., section 2, until Part III., section
5, was a serious thing. Let the reader transfer sections 5 and 6 of Part
III. to their natural place in Part I., after section 2, and it will
appear how brief and insufficient is the treatment, how naturally the
author admits that he is employing ' materials which are of a mixed and
heterogeneous nature ' (rsr), and consequently how much of the brief
discussion falls out of account when it is placed in its natural
position.
In proceeding to 'give a
particular account of ideas,' the discussion enters into the heart of
all the complications connected with their relations. We become
concerned with the conditions of reflections; memory and imagination are
called into requisition; association of ideas are noted; and forthwith
we are drifting out on the wide ocean where single impressions are as
difficult to descry as the mountain rills flowing to the sea. Here each
voyager has his separate experience. Men originate their own systems of
thought. There are associations of impressions and of their
'correspondent ideas' according to similarity and dissimilarity; and of
things according to their contiguity in place and in time; and of
occurrences according to the relation of cause and effect. We speak of
substance and qualities, and modes of existence; and according to the
natural activity of reflection we institute a search into space and
time, and all problems of existence presented by the great universe.
Hume is eager to grapple
with all the complications here involved, and to him is due the honour
belonging to independent research into the origin of the tendencies and
habitual courses of reflection characteristic of our mental procedure.
His first concern is to be true to his fundamental position, 'that all
our simple ideas in their first appearance are derived from simple
impressions which are correspondent to them, and which they exactly
represent.' His next is to trace, with the most painstaking care, the
manner in which men come to think as they do of the relations of things
external, and of their own doings and destiny. Only a brief outline of
his method can be given here.
Impressions and ideas are
passing incidents, quickly vanishing from our consciousness. How then
are relations established affording coherence to our experience, and
giving to it an enlarged significance? 'When any impression has been
present with the mind, it again makes its appearance there as an
idea'(23). The impressions ' have gone before to prepare the way' for
the ideas, and ' the faculty by which we repeat our impressions ' is
either memory or imagination. We note ' that quality by which two ideas
are connected together in the imagination,' so that the one 'naturally
introduces the other' to consciousness; and also 'the arbitrary union of
two ideas in the fancy,' in accordance with some particular circumstance
by which 'we may think proper to compare them' (32). Here three '
faculties ' are at work, Memory, Imagination, Comparison. Their nature
is not specially considered, but rather the 'association of ideas.'
'This uniting principle among ideas 'is ' as a gentle force which
commonly prevails,' as appears in the common features of language, '
nature in a manner pointing out to everyone those simple ideas which are
most proper to be united into a complex one.' Such references to the
action of 'nature' are frequent. The qualities by which ' the mind is
after this manner conveyed from one idea to another' are Resemblance,
Contiguity in time or place, and Cause and Effect. We enter on the
exercise of comparison, discrimination, classification, and inference.
We are within the recognised province of Intellect and Will. Hume does
not, however, deal with the exercise of these in a prominent way. He
does, indeed, occasionally allude to the fact that ' we accompany our
ideas with a kind of reflection' (52), and, referring to power and
activity, he remarks that ' when a person is possessed of any power,
there is no more required to convert it into action, but the exercise of
the Will' (30). These are, however, only occasional references. He is
much more occupied with 'association of ideas' as 'the gentle force
which commonly prevails,' under conditions not generally noted by us.
His service to philosophy is most manifest in this direction, while
things, as well as ideas, come largely into view.
Cause and Effect may be
selected as the most important of the relations named, the treatment of
which is most characteristic of our author. Resemblance is readily
restricted to ideas, but subsequent references apply to the outer world.
'As the senses, in changing their objects, . . . take them as they lie
contiguous to each other, the imagination must by long custom acquire
the same method of thinking' (28). But 'there is no relation which
produces a stronger connection in the fancy, and makes one idea more
readily recall another than the relation of cause and effect betwixt
their objects' (28). Cause concerns change and motion, as well as origin
of existence, and so bears on our observations first, and on philosophic
thought afterwards. A cause is that which under existing conditions
produces change in the order of things. We deal no longer with sensory
impressions, but with things as related to each other. Hume's statements
recognise this. Causality is ' the power by which one object produces
another' (126). 'Cause and effect are relations of which we receive
information from experience' (r2 6). Experience places us in relation
with the external, so that we are constantly influenced by the
conditions around us, and that to a degree much greater than particular
impressions entail. Hence the need for referring not only to impressions
and ideas, but also to objects, to physical laws, and to the action of
nature. Allusions to those abound in Hume's Treatise, but without
deliberate treatment of the problem as to the relation of impressions to
objects. There is, however, necessary reference to adequate and
inadequate 'ideas,' and it is assumed that 'wherever ideas are adequate
representations of objects, the relations, contradictions, and
agreements of the ideas are all applicable to the objects' (58).
The following are
examples of Hume's more general statements as to Causation. Causality is
'the power by which one object produces another' (126). 'It is only
causation which produces such a connexion as to give us assurance, from
the existence or action of one object, that it was followed or preceded
by any other existence or action' ^33). 'To begin regularly we must
consider the idea of causation, and see from what origin it is derived,
. . . examining that primary impression from which it arises' (134). It
is granted that 'the idea of Cause' is within consciousness, the problem
concerns its entrance.
Our author's first effort
is to fence round the area of research. This is done by a series of
negatives which will be admitted. (1) 'The power by which one object
produces another is never discoverable merely from their idea '(126);
nor (2) ' from abstract reasoning or reflection' (126). (3) 'There is no
single phenomenon, even the most simple, which can be accounted for from
the qualities of the objects as they appear to us'; or (4) ' which we
could foresee without the help of our memory and experience' (126) This,
then, is Hume's grand difficulty. If ' nothing is ever really present
with the mind but its perceptions, or impressions and ideas' (123), and
if ' the qualities of the objects as they appear to us' do not include
'the power by which one object produces another,' whence comes the
conception of Cause?
For an answer we must
turn to the objects and their relations. 'Let us, therefore, cast our
eye on any two objects, which we call cause and effect, and turn them on
all sides, in order to find that impression which produces an idea of
such prodigious consequence' (135). Coming soon to admit that ' there is
a necessary connexion,' he says, 'Here again I turn the object on all
sides ' (139). The phrase is a favourite one, indicating his reliance on
carefully derived observation rather than on casual impressions, such as
come to the non-reflective mind, and declaring how difficult is the pass
over these mountains. How can we rise from the fleeting impressions, and
from their ' double,' to recognise the fixed or the ' necessary' in
nature and in thought ? That this elevation is reached, even by ordinary
minds independently, is a familiar fact; yet is the exercise one of very
striking character, for ' the mind in its reasoning from causes or
effects carries its views beyond these objects which it sees or
remembers' (r48). Without parting company with its 'impressions and
ideas,' it transcends them all, and also those efforts of memory by
which those are recalled. The 'necessary' in thought, and also in nature
itself, is as superior to ' common experience ' as the mountain height
is above the stream in the valley. Even ' to turn the objects on all
sides' will help us no more than our lifting of stones from the bed of
the stream and turning them in our hands before throwing them back will
help us in climbing to the heights above. When we speak of ' invariable
sequence,' and 'uniformity of nature,' and of 'necessary connection,'
'we always conclude there is some secret cause' (133), as to which
experience carries no witness. Experience leaves all in uncertainty—the
issue is doubt—a sceptical philosophy, thinking and speaking of that
which is beyond our reach, yet sorely puzzled by a persistent reference
to the necessity of a cause, which all affirm, and yet which experience
does not warrant. The Philosophy exploring the valley finds no approach
to the pass by which to cross into the region beyond. ' Some secret
cause' is still our phrase.
At this point curiosity
is greatly quickened as Hume's steps are watched. ' The idea of
causation must be derived from some relation among objects' (136).
'What, then, are the features of this relation, which is of greater
importance than any other?' Objects considered as causes or effects are
(1) contiguous; (2) cause is prior to the effect; (3) ' there is a
necessary connection to be taken into consideration;' and this third
feature is of greater importance' than the other two relations, for
contiguity of place and priority in time are not peculiar to the
relation under consideration. When we speak of the necessity of a cause,
and when the recognition of this necessity stimulates our enquiry and
regulates our reasoning, there seems an ultimate principle which
impressions and their ideas do not originate.
Pressed by this
difficulty, Hume devotes a section of the Treatise to the question, 'Why
a cause is always necessary' (I. iii. 3, p. 141). 'It is a general maxim
in philosophy that whatever begins to exist must have a cause of
existence. This is commonly taken for granted in all reasonings without
any proof given or demanded. It is supposed to be founded on intuition,
and to be one of those maxims which, though they may be denied with the
lips, it is impossible for men in their hearts really to doubt of '
(142) This is very different from fastening the eyes on ' particular
effects,' and thereafter searching for their 'particular causes.' When
we say that 'a cause is always necessary,' we maintain a general truth
which cannot be established by any number of particulars, or even by a
whole lifetime of experience. The recognition of the maxim, and the
search for a particular cause adequate to account for a particular
effect, are exercises of mind quite distinct, the one implying
certainty, the other ignorance, which can be dispelled only by
observation. Hume's enquiry is concerned with the former of these
questions, the warrant for the general maxim 'that whatever begins to
exist must have a cause,' and the claim that this maxim is held by men '
without any proof given or demanded.' His method is to ' examine this
maxim by the idea of knowledge above explained,' that ' nothing is ever
really present with the mind but its perceptions, or impressions and
ideas.' But this maxim cannot be included among impressions; we seem in
danger of making a theory the test of fact, rather than fact the test of
theory. ' All certainty arises from the comparison of ideas, and from
the discovery of such relations as are unalterable, so long as the ideas
continue the same' (142). These relations are, resemblance, proportions,
degrees of quality, and contrariety. None of these 'are implied in this
proposition, Whatever has a beginning has also a cause of existence.'
What then ? Cause is not an impression, and cannot be its double. The
relation of cause and effect is distinct from all the relations
enumerated. We cannot, indeed, demonstrate ' the impossibility there is
that anything can ever begin to exist without some productive
principle.' 'The general maxim in philosophy' is, however, held '
without any proof given or demanded.' The attempted demonstrations of
Hobbes, Clarke, and Locke are unavailing. Hence it seems open to Hume to
retreat upon his favourite position. ' Since it is not from knowledge or
any scientific reasoning that we derive the opinion of the necessity of
a cause to every new production, that opinion must necessarily arise
from observation and experience' (r47). How, then, is the popular
opinion, the 'maxim in philosophy,' the proposition 'whatever has a
beginning has also a cause of existence' to be vindicated? His course is
a retreat from the principle to particular occurrences, as these stand
related to particular causes. 'The next question should naturally be,
how experience gives rise to such a principle? But as I find it will be
more convenient to sink this question in the following, Why we conclude
that such particular causes must necessarily have such particular
effects, and why we form an inference from one to another? we shall make
that the subject of our future enquiry. It will, perhaps, be found in
the end that the same answer will serve for both questions ' (p. 148).
This expectation,
sounding oddly from one who professes only a knowledge of particulars in
experience, appears at the close of section 3 of the third Part of the
Treatise, and not till section 14 do we reach ' the idea of necessary
connexion' (p. 272). These 120 pages are occupied with discussions as to
the characteristics of our reasonings, dependence on memory,
probability, association of ideas, opinion or belief joined to
conceptions of things, custom, operating in an oblique and artificial
manner, influence of contiguity and resemblance as assisting the
conception of cause and effect, formation of general rules, credulity,
effects of education, influence of belief, perception of pain and
pleasure, the idea of good and evil as actuating the will, effects on
the imagination, mixture of truth and falsehood, likelihood and
probability, the slow steps by which our judgment arrives at a full
assurance, strong tendency to continue in an accepted course, direct and
subsidiary or oblique influence of habit, transference of the past to
the future; 'all reasonings are nothing but the effects of custom.'
From this extended
discussion it will be enough to select the references to causality,
which will enable the reader to trace the general line of thought. Even
when the mind carries its reasonings from causes or effects beyond
objects seen or remembered, 'it must never lose sight of them entirely.'
' We must establish the existence of causes' (r48). 'As to those
impressions which arise from the senses, their ultimate cause is, in my
opinion, perfectly inexplicable by human reason, and it will always be
impossible to decide with certainty whether they arise immediately from
the object, or are produced by th'e creative power of the mind, or are
derived from the author of our being' (r52). 'The inference we draw from
cause to effect is not derived merely from a survey of particular
objects' (155). Even 'contiguity and succession' do not prove
sufficient; our reliance is largely on constant conjunction, but this
implies no more than this, 'that like objects have always been placed in
like relations of contiguity and succession,' a fact which is
insufficient to warrant the assertion of ' necessary connexion' (157).
Thus 'this new discovered relation of a constant conjuncture seems to
advance us but very little in our way.' 'Our memory presents us only
with a multitude of instances,' and it must be confessed that ' from the
mere repetition of any past impression, even to infinity, there never
will arise any new original idea, such as that of a necessary connexion'
(158). The investigation is thus in danger of closing in a recognition
of ' continuity in nature' as a fact in history, not in an explanation
of the philosophic maxim. A sense of helplessness seems to come over the
investigator, who is constrained to confess that 'from the mere
repetition of any past impression, even to infinity, there never will
arise any new original idea, such as that of a necessary connexion'
(158). 'Even after the observation of the frequent or constant
conjunction of objects we have no reason to draw any inference
concerning any object beyond those of experience ' (245). The alleged '
necessity ' has disappeared, vanishing into the gathering of unsolved
problems, whose accumulation contributes to the building up of a
sceptical philosophy. Yet this search for particular causes would never
have been instituted but for the belief ' commonly taken for granted in
all reasonings, without any proof given or demanded,' that 'whatever
begins to exist must have a cause of existence' (141). While trusting
Experience to its utmost extent, we may possibly be constrained to admit
that it does not account for all our thoughts. However far our
observations and reasonings are pushed, we cannot complete our
demonstration. The small success ' has at last obliged philosophers to
conclude that the ultimate force and efficacy of nature is perfectly
unknown to us, and that it is in vain we search for it in all the known
qualities of matter ' (279). 'Suppose two objects to be presented to us,
of which the one is the cause and the other the effect, it is plain that
from the simple consideration of one or both these objects we shall
never perceive the tie by which they are united' (285). All that can be
said is this, that after 'a sufficient number of instances we
immediately feel a determination of the mind to pass from one object to
its usual.attendant.' This determination is unexplained; custom
prevails. 'The several instances of resembling conjunctions lead us into
the notions of power and necessity. . . . These instances have no union
but in the mind which observes them and collects their ideas. . . .
Necessity then is the effect of this observation, and is nothing but an
internal impression of the mind, or a determination to carry our
thoughts from one object to another ' (289). This is only necessary
determination of our thoughts, leaving unexplained our fundamental
maxim, ' the necessity of a cause for every occurrence.' How he regards
this result appears from these words—' I am sensible that of all the
paradoxes which I have had, or shall hereafter have occasion to advance
in the course of this treatise, the present one is the most violent'
(291).
The main features of
Hume's intellectual philosophy are now before the reader. Our limits
prevent our dealing with his analysis of the passions and his theory of
the basis of moral distinctions. My leading purpose has been to make
clear what is to be understood by Hume's scepticism. It is distrust of
everything which transcends our sensory impressions and the ' copies' of
them. All certainty is reduced to passing impression and its passing
influence. There is no direct evidence as to the nature of matter or of
mind. He esteems these his chief ' discoveries' in philosophy, the exact
correspondence of impressions and ideas; that association of ideas under
custom is the utmost reach of the understanding; that the knowledge of a
cause is unattainable, and that ' the very essence of belief consists in
the force and vivacity of the conception.'
The first volume of the
Treatise does not conclude without acknowledgment of the sense of his
own perplexity and misgiving, which has an autobiographic value of the
highest degree. ' The intense view of the manifold contradictions and
imperfections in human reason has so wrought upon me and heated my
brain, that I am ready to reject all belief and reasoning, and can look
upon no opinion even as more probable or likely than another. Where am
I, or what? From what causes do I derive my existence, and to what
condition shall I return? Whose favour shall I court, and whose anger
must I dread? What beings surround me, and on whom have I any influence,
or who have any influence on me? I am confounded with all these
questions, and begin to fancy myself in the most deplorable condition
imaginable, environed with the deepest darkness, and utterly deprived of
the use of every member and faculty.
'Most fortunately it
happens that, since reason is incapable of dispelling these clouds,
nature herself suffices to that purpose and cures me of this philosophic
melancholy and delirium, either by relaxing this bent of mind, or by
some avocation and lively impression of my senses, which obliterate all
these chimeras. I dine, I play a game of back-gammon; I converse, and am
merry with my friends; and when after three or four hours' amusement, I
would return to these speculations, they appear so cold, and strained,
and ridiculous, that I cannot find in my heart to enter into them any
farther.'
Still, ' I cannot forbear
having a curiosity to be acquainted with the principles of moral good
and evil, the nature and foundation of government, and the cause of
those several passions and inclinations which actuate and govern me. I
am uneasy to think I approve of one object and disapprove of another ;
call one thing beautiful
and another deformed;
decide concerning truth and falsehood, reason and folly, without knowing
on what principles I proceed'(466-470).
The reception given to
the Treatise was disappointing to Hume. It did not on its appearance
awaken any marked interest. But its effect on human thought was deep and
lasting. A new epoch in philosophy follows directly from it. Scepticism
results in a stronger faith. The effect on philosophy was quickening.
Theology was differently affected. It was resentful and actively
antagonistic. The assault was delivered from a remote point; but, on
that account, it seemed all the more unsettling; in challenging the
foundations of all certainty, it threatened religious faith by involving
all belief in common disaster. To the theologians of the day, who were
the most earnest and devoted expounders of Christianity, Hume was the
arch-sceptic—the adversary of religion. Their attitude towards him was,
however, determined more by their profound sense of the interests
involved, and of the consequences to the country which would follow a
period of unsettled faith, than by an exact and far-reaching survey of
his philosophic positions.
In the region of
philosophy, the result was altogether a gain. Hume led the way into the
enquiry as to the Origin of our impressions and convictions and habits
of thought. He opened up the large question concerning the synthesis of
knowledge. He tested empirical philosophy by asking whether all things
are not involved in uncertainty, if experience is only a succession of
sensations, vanishing in less vivid copies. His research involved
constant reference to objects and their relations and continual allusion
to the action of mind, involving imagination, thought, will, custom, and
general principles. Hume's references to the mind or soul possess
special interest and are of frequent occurrence. Of these, there are
three which deserve to be quoted. They occur when his investigations
into ' the extent and force of the human understanding ' is far
advanced. 'What we call a mind is nothing but^aj3£ap,sr c.Qlle^orypfjlifferent
perceptions, united together by certain relations, and supposed, though
falsely, to be endowed with a perfect simplicity and identity' (361).
'The mind is a kind of theatre where several perceptions successively
make their appearance; pass," repass, glide away, and mingle in an
infinite variety of postures and situations. . . . The comparison of the
theatre must not mislead us. They are the successive perceptions only
that constitute the mind; nor have we the most distant notion of the
place where these scenes are represented or of the materials of which it
is composed' (439). 'I cannot ,compare the. soul more properly to
anything tlia'n to a republic or: commonwealth, in which the several
members are united by the reciprocal ties of government and
subordination, and give use to other persons who propagate the same
republic in the incessant changes of its parts. And as the same
individual republic may not only change its members, but also its law
and constitutions, in like manner the same person may vary his character
and disposition, as well as his impressions and ideas, without losing
his identity' (453). The sceptical bias is marked, but there is a sense
of the inevitable acknowledgment of an individuality — an identity of *
These passages occur thus—I., iv. sec. 2 ; sec. 6; sec. 6.
being and a power of
direction of conduct. The breadth of significance involved may be seen,
when Hume says in preparing the way for the quotation last given—' The
true idea of the human mind is to consider it as a system of different
perceptions or different existences which are linked together by the
relation of cause and effect, and mutually produce, destroy, influence,
and modify each other' (453). The passages do not readily coalesce in a
consistent and coherent representation of the understanding, but they
come as near to each other as seems possible in a sceptical philosophy,
declaring ' that all the nice and subtle questions concerning personal
identity can never possibly be decided.' The author does not escape the
confession of his own despair,—' For my part, I know not what ought to
be done in the present case.' ' A true sceptic will be diffident of his
philosophical doubts, as well as of his philosophical conviction.'
Hume's references to
Nature (27, 211, 321, 374,) will specially interest the student of
mental philosophy. His service to philosophy was great even with 'his
miscellaneous way of reasoning' (i., 457) His scepticism gave a fillip
to deeper thought; it awakened new interest in the thinking view of
things ; it roused to fresh effort the men who were in danger of being
satisfied with dogmatic formulae. It brought a searchlight on
Empiricism, exposing its weakness; it disclosed the large demands which
philosophy makes on Reason; it lifted the question as to ' the extent
and force of the human understanding' into a position of first rank; it
introduced a new epoch, full of fenergy, enthusiasm, and expectation.
These results came slowly; we cannot wonder that the author was
disconcerted and disheartened by lack of evidence of their approach; but
they came surely; yet not in such form as was expected by the pioneer,
who whetted his axe so eagerly and dealt his blows with an energy which
had gathered force from daily exercise.
Hume's native land was
roused. The 'Scottish Philosophy' was the fruit of his scepticism—the
philosophy of 'common sense,' resting on ' principles' or essential
conditions of the understanding, without reference to which no
explanation of Experience is possible. The answer came first, in
critical form, from another Hume—Henry Home, Lord Kames; more slowly and
systematically from Reid, Stewart, and Hamilton, Scotland's leaders in
the march for 'a thinking view of things.' A deeper and more elaborate
answer came from Kant, who confessed that he had been roused by Hume
from dogmatic slumber. Kant's contribution consisted of a critical
examination of the conditions of human knowledge—a marvel of acumen,
which has taxed the acuteness of later thinkers for its exposition and
criticism, and has given to the synthesis of human knowledge a new
meaning. To Hume's scepticism we owe the transcendental philosophy of
Germany, through all the developments of Kantian and Hegelian thought
onwards to ' the return upon Kant' more recently proclaimed. The
reception of the Treatise was such that he afterwards seemed ' anxious
to disconnect himself with the authorship' (Burton, I., r36), or,
otherwise, to describe it as a 'juvenile work,' 'projected before he
left college' (Advertisement to Essays). On the other hand, he claims
that ' most of the principles and reasonings contained in this volume'
of Essays were ' published' in the Treatise;
and then he adds, 'not
finding it successful, he was sensible of his error in going to the
press too early; he cast the whole anew in the following pieces.'
Whatever may have been the advantages in respect of the more popular
form of the Essays, most students of the earlier and later works will
concur in the judgment of Huxley as to their merits, when he says,
concerning the Inquiry,—' In style, it exhibits a great improvement on
the Treatise; but the substance, if not deteriorated, is certainly not
improved' (Huxley's Hume, p. 11). |