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Title

David Hume's Skepticism - Expression of the Late Baroque.

Authors

DUMITRESCU, Marius

Abstract

The early Baroque, characterized by the skeptical spirit of the 16th century, reaches its peak in the following century with Descartes' hyperbolic doubt. The purpose of this paper is to analyze two of Hume's works, Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion and An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding in order to place the philosopher in the tradition of Baroque thought. First of all, we will show that David Hume pushed skepticism far beyond its ancient or Cartesian limits, attacking even our way of formulating sentences, which is a subjective one, the result of some psychological factors that cannot be the basis of science. Secondly, we will demonstrate that Hume's skepticism belongs to the late Baroque and is, by its radical character, a form of metaphysical denial of any universal certainties. In conclusion, Hume's skeptical spirit, manifested in relation to the authority constructed by the post-Westphalian ideology, overcame the past, which was at the time denied, and represents, from a philosophical point of view, the origin of the revolutionary spirit of the second half of the 18th century.

Subjects

HUME, David, 1711-1776; NATURAL theology; EIGHTEENTH century; SIXTEENTH century; PSYCHOLOGICAL factors; SKEPTICISM

Publication

BRAIN: Broad Research in Artificial Intelligence & Neuroscience, 2024, Vol 15, Issue 2, p113

ISSN

2068-0473

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.18662/brain/15.2/567

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