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DAVID HUME David Hume’s (1711-1776) exciting new philosophic outlook combined the empiricism of Locke and Berkeley, who argued that knowledge comes only from sense perception, with the moral philosophy of Francis Hutcheson, who argued that morality comes only from sentiment or feeling. He believes that our scientific laws, are nothing but sense perceptions which our feelings lead us to believe. Therefore it is doubtful that we have any DAVID HUME He says “All the perceptions of the human mind divide themselves into two different kinds, which I shall call Impressions and Ideas.” It follows from the above citation that Hume accepts two basic premises of Locke. First, sense-perception is the only source of knowledge. Secondly, what we apprehend through sense-perception are impressions and ideas. Here, we may point out that what Hume calls ‘impressions’ are nothing other than the ‘simple ideas’ of Locke and ‘ideas’ of Berkeley. DAVID HUME Hume defines impressions and ideas in the following term, “Those perceptions, which enter with the most force and violence, we may call impressions, and under this name I comprehend all our sensations, passions and emotions as they make their first appearance in the soul. By Ideas I mean the faint images of these in thinking and reasoning.” DAVID HUME In this definition, Hume makes it clear that both ‘impressions’ and ‘ideas’ are ‘perceptions’ of our mind, and the difference between them lies not in kind but only in the ‘degrees of force and liveliness, with which they strike upon the mind. DAVID HUME ‘Impressions’, in his view, are the lively perceptions. When we reflect on these lively perceptions, we receive ‘ideas’, which are less lively copies of these ‘impressions’. In order to emphasise the mental character of ‘impressions’ and ‘ideas’, Hume maintains that the difference between them is a difference of feeling and ‘thinking’. IMMANUEL KANT (1724-1804), Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) is the most influential thinker because he gave a new direction to modern philosophy and of European Enlightenment. Kant have made great stir in the fields of epistemology, metaphysics, morality and aesthetics. Today philosophers may disagree with Kant on many points, but no one can ignore him. IMMANUEL KANT (1724-1804), Kant develops the logical foundation for a moral philosophy which is based on a priori rather than empirical principles. Kant proposes a rationalist theory of ethics, arguing that ethical judgments should be based on pure reason. Kant maintains that rationalism in making ethical judgments is necessary because only pure reason can define practical principles of morality which have universal validity. IMMANUEL KANT (1724-1804), • Kant argues that there are universal moral laws which are not merely empirical but which are logically necessary. An action which is good should not only conform to a moral law, but should be done for the sake of a moral law. If an action conforms to a moral law, but is not done for the sake of a moral law, then its conformity is merely contingent to subjective conditions, and is not logically necessary. Kant emphasizes that moral philosophy cannot be merely an empirical inquiry, but that it must be a metaphysical inquiry, and that it must be based on pure practical reason. CATEGORICAL IMPERATIVE • According to Kant, the 'categorical imperative' is to act in such a way that the principle according to which the action is performed can be accepted as a universal law of morality. This can be stated as the command to "Act only in such a way that you can will that the maxim of your action should become a universal law."4 Kant defines a maxim as a subjective principle of volition, and he defines a law as an objective principle of reason. Thus, an action is good if it is produced by a unity of subjective and objective motivation, i.e. if the subjective principle of volition which motivates the action becomes an objective principle of reason. • It may also be argued that Kant’s theory of universal moral laws tends to polarize moral judgments by reducing them to statements about what is lawful or unlawful. The concept of a 'categorical imperative' may oversimplify the moral complexity of situations in which there is moral ambiguity, and may not be applicable to situations in which some degree of moral compromise may be necessary. The theory of the 'categorical imperative' may not be adaptable to situations in which there is not a perfect choice of moral action. KANT’S CRITIQUE OF DESCARTES AND HUME Although Kant borrowed heavily from the empiricist tradition, he modified the empiricist knowledge gained by sensory experience. Hume wished to prove that metaphysics was invalid. Kant wished to salvage morality, and to show that empiricist thought was inadequate. Kant responded to his predecessors by arguing against the Empiricists that the mind is not a blank slate that is written upon by the empirical world, and by rejecting the Rationalists' notion that pure, a priori knowledge of a mind-independent world was possible KANT’S CRITIQUE OF DESCARTES AND HUME Who is right in the epistemological debate: the empiricists, with their emphasis on the senses as the exclusive source of our knowledge of the world, or the rationalists, who insists on reason alone as the final arbiter of truth? Kant, who was familiar with the philosophy of Locke, Berkeley, and Hume, was steeped in a form of rationalistic philosophy stemming from Descartes but was more immediately influenced by the German philosopher KANT’S CRITIQUE OF DESCARTES AND HUME Kant shares Descartes’ conviction of the foundational role of the proposition “I think” on the one hand, of the concept of God on the other hand, in framing all cognitive use of reason. And in both cases, Kant’s discussion of the Cartesian view is focused primarily on the statement of existence. Descartes thinks he can derive from the proposition “I think” and from the concept of God, respectively. Kant criticizes the Cartesian proof of the existence of God, on the KANT’S CRITIQUE OF DESCARTES AND HUME Kant’s epistemology is a clear and explicit response to Hume’s scepticism, an attempt to provide both a foundation for empirical scientific knowledge and to show the limits of such knowledge. Kant freely admits that reading the work of David Hume was the stimulus that roused him from his “dogmatic slumber,” as he put it. CONCLUSION - KANT In simple terms Kant wants to show how objective knowledge, that is knowledge about the world, which is independent of our own subjective perception, is possible. This question can be resolved into a question about the presuppositions of experience, or what it is that must be true for us to be able to have experience, as we know it. In this way Kant will bring together both the empiricism of Hume and the nascent rationalism of Descartes and, in so doing, produce a complete epistemology and an explanation of the process of