04979oam 2200829I 450 991081478290332120240402110600.01-134-63409-997866127779290-203-18205-71-282-77792-01-134-63410-20-203-17092-X10.4324/9780203182055(CKB)1000000000007000(EBL)166153(OCoLC)559317087(SSID)ssj0000239805(PQKBManifestationID)11205987(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000239805(PQKBWorkID)10252388(PQKB)11174852(MiAaPQ)EBC166153(EXLCZ)99100000000000700020180706d2001 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrRoutledge philosophy guidebook to Hume on religion /David O'Connor1st ed.London ;New York :Routledge,2001.1 online resource (249 p.)Routledge Philosophy GuideBooksDescription based upon print version of record.0-415-20195-0 0-415-20194-2 Includes bibliographical references (pages 219-222) and index.Cover; Hume on Religion; Copyright; Contents; Preface; A Note on the Edition of the Dialogues Used; Abbreviations; 1. Introduction: Hume's Life, His Philosophy of Religion, and His Influence; Life; Hume on Religion; Hume's Philosophy of Religion; Hume's Influence; 2. An Overview of the Dialogues; Introduction; The Dialogues in Outline; Natural Religion and Religion in Practice; 3. The Scope and Legitimacy of Natural Religion (Prologue, and Dialogues, Part I); Introduction; The Limits of Reason; 4. Cleanthes' First Design Argument (Dialogues, Part II); IntroductionCleanthes' First Design ArgumentThe Criteria of Good Analogical Arguments; Philo's Criticism and Cleanthes' Rebuttal; 5. Cleanthes' Second Design Argument: The 'Irregular' Argument (Dialogues, Part III); Introduction; The 'Irregular' Design Argument; Are Basic Religious Beliefs Natural Beliefs?; 6. 'A Mind Like the Human' (Dialogues, Parts IV and V); Introduction; Mysticism, Anthropomorphism, Scepticism (Dialogues, Part IV); Like Effects, Like Causes (Dialogues, Part V); Philo's Concession of Design; 7. Naturalism and Scepticism (Dialogues, Parts VI, VII, and VIII); IntroductionThe Hypothesis of Living Matter and an Inherent Principle of Order (Dialogues, Part VI)Ranking Four Causal Principles: Reason, Instinct, Generation, Vegetation (Dialogues, Part VII); 'The Old Epicurean Hypothesis' (Dialogues, Part VIII); 8. Further Weakening of Natural Religion (Dialogues, Part IX); Introduction; Demea's Case for a Necessary First Cause; Philo's Naturalistic Hypothesis Again; 9. The Problem of Evil (Dialogues, Parts X and XI); Introduction; Theism's Problem of Evil (Dialogues, Part X); Cleanthes' Response to the Inference Problem: Limited Theism (Dialogues, Part XI)Hume's Articulation of the Basic Presuppositions in the Standard Debate on the Problem of Evil (Dialogues, Part XI)The Hypothesis of Indifference (Dialogues, Part XI); 10. 'True Religion' (Dialogues, Part XII); Introduction; Appearance and Reality in Philo's Concession of Design in Nature; True Religion and Vulgar Superstition; The Five 'Ifs'; Scepticism, Deism, Naturalism, Irony; In Conclusion: Faith and Reason; Afterword: Where Is Hume in Hume's Dialogues?; Who Speaks for Hume?; Does Hume Conceal His Thinking in the Dialogues?; Bibliography; IndexDavid Hume was the most important British philosopher of the eighteenth century. His Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion is a classic text in the philosophy of religion.Hume on Religion introduces and asseses:*Hume's life and the background to the Dialogues *the ideas and text of Dialogues *Hume's continuing importance to philosophy.Routledge Philosophy GuideBooksHume on religionHeidegger, MartinHume, DavidNatural theologyPhilosophical anthropologyPhilosophical anthropologyNatural theologyPhilosophyHILCCPhilosophy & ReligionHILCCHeidegger, Martin.Hume, David.Natural theology.Philosophical anthropology.Philosophical anthropology.Natural theologyPhilosophyPhilosophy & Religion193210O'Connor David1949-,891822AU-PeELAU-PeELAU-PeELBOOK9910814782903321Routledge philosophy guidebook to Hume on religion4075265UNINA