David Hume
David Hume recognizes two kinds of human reason which
are the relations of ideas and the matters of fact. The relations of ideas
encompasses aspects that are either intuitively of demonstratively certain such
s the sciences of geometry, arithmetic, and even algebra. For example, it is
easy to demonstrate that the square of a hypotenuse equals the two sides in
that the suggestion expresses a form of relation between the figures. Moreover,
by saying that three a multiplication of three and five equals the half of
thirty, is an expression of a form of relation between the numbers involved
(Lipton, 32-37). The propositions of the relation of ideas are discoverable by
the operation of the human thought without depending on what may be existing
anywhere else in the universe. For instance, even if there was never a triangle
or a circle existing in the world before, the demonstration by Euclid on the
ideas made it sure that they exist.
The second kind of human reason is matters of fact
that are not necessarily demonstrated and hence cannot be ascertained in the
same manner as the relations of ideas. The matters of fact are conceived by the
mind and can never be subject to a contradiction since the mind conceives them
with similar distinctness and facility. For example, a matter of fact that a
human being needs to breathe to live is a fact that even an attempt to
demonstrate otherwise is futile. The fact that its falsehood cannot be proved
is an indication that it could never lead to a contradiction.
David Hume further indicates that all reasoning
regarding matter if facts seemingly founded on the relation of cause and effect
(Hume). He further asserts that using the relationship, human beings can go
beyond the evidence by our senses and memory. Hume argued that we reason
inductively in that we rely on experience and evidence gathered by our senses
to ground our beliefs or rather form the basis for our reasoning. Inductive
references are those that one has gone through and therefore, already
established a kind of inference regarding them. For example, the rising of the
sun every morning is a matter of fact reached upon inductively as human beings
have experienced and seen it since they are born. One does not have to be
taught or told about it. Hume however, indicates that inductive reasoning as a
form of skepticism if it offers some references to reason (Hume). We cannot
ascertain or even show the availability of knowledge, but we just opt to think
that we do have knowledge when we rely on inductive references to reasoning. He
further highlights the fact that the beliefs and perceptions we hold as a
result of inductive reasoning are in reality not justifiable in a rational
manner. Deductive reasoning, on the other hand, is more reliable than induction
since it involves the first order logic of an individual. It is also
demonstratively complete in that it can be demonstrated (Campbell, 553). The
premises held regarding an argument are based on rules of logic before implying
the conclusion of an argument (Hume). The deduction is, therefore, more
reliable as one can acquire knowledge and give an explanation on how a premise
is arrived at with ease. Inductive inferences are based on what is probable,
but deductive references offer certainty.
Hume argues that all of the physical science is
probably because it is inductive and not deductive therefore eliminating the
certainty. Hume was pretty convincing regarding the inductive nature of
physical science and the lack of certainty that it holds (Lipton, 30). For
there to be knowledge one needs to have logic and deduce a form of reasoning
that leads to the formation of knowledge. The physical sciences do not offer
any explanations or systems of deduction and, therefore, are subject to contradiction
and creation of various assumptions as well as explanations (Campbell, 555). It
is the inductive nature of the physical sciences that lead to the formation of
problems among the scientists and other stakeholders in trying to form
knowledge regarding certain issues. For example, it is subject to personal
interpretation on how the earth came into being and anyone with a good
scientific study can come up with a theory. It is because of the probable
nature of the science of revolution that has led to multiple ideas on the same.
For example, there is the creation theory, the evolution theory and more and
more scientists still come up with their ideas based on personal intuition and
observations. Furthermore, inductive references to knowledge may be unreliable
because they are based on our senses and experiences that may be based or
subject to individual interpretation in some instances (Campbell, 560). For
example, individuals may agree that the sun rises in the morning and sets in
the evening but may not agree on the time it rises and sets. It all depends on
when one perceives the first light or rather at times depending on the location
of the individual. It, however, does not make the physical sciences weaker by
any means it just makes them more subject to diverse interpretations and
counterarguments.
Works cited
Campbell, Scott, “Fixing a Hole in the Ground of
Induction,†Australasian Journal of
Philosophy, 79(4): 553–563, 2001.
Hume, David. The chapter on Cause and Effect: An
Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding (1772). Hackett Publ Co., 1993.
Lipton, Peter. The inference to the Best Explanation,
London, and New York: Routledge. Pp. 35-80, 2004.
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