In the "Treatise of Human Nature," David Hume claims that we are determined to hold certain unavoidable and necessary beliefs that have been termed 'natural beliefs' in the literature: the beliefs in causal power, the external world and the self. This book is concerned with establishing whether or not the belief in an intelligent designer, as expressed by Philo's 'irregular argument' in Humes's "Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion," can be included in the classification of 'natural belief'.
Language
English
Pages
184
Format
Hardcover
Publisher
Peter Lang Gmbh, Internationaler Verlag Der Wissenschaften
Release
December 01, 1993
ISBN
0820422010
ISBN 13
9780820422015
A Religion Without Talking: Religious Belief and Natural Belief in Hume's Philosophy of Religion
In the "Treatise of Human Nature," David Hume claims that we are determined to hold certain unavoidable and necessary beliefs that have been termed 'natural beliefs' in the literature: the beliefs in causal power, the external world and the self. This book is concerned with establishing whether or not the belief in an intelligent designer, as expressed by Philo's 'irregular argument' in Humes's "Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion," can be included in the classification of 'natural belief'.
Language
English
Pages
184
Format
Hardcover
Publisher
Peter Lang Gmbh, Internationaler Verlag Der Wissenschaften