What do you think? — Humelover
“...It must certainly be allowed, that nature has kept us at a great distance from all her secrets, and has afforded us only the knowledge of a few superficial qualities of objects; while she conceals from us those powers and principles on which the influence of those objects entirely depends....”
(E.C.H.U., 4. 2., 1739, in 2ed, 1777; 1963 ed. sec. 29)
“...Reason must approach nature with the view, indeed, of receiving information from it, not, however, in the character of a pupil, who listens to all that his master chooses to tell him, but in that of a judge, who compels the witnesses to reply to those questions which he himself thinks fit to propose....”
(CPR, Bxiii, in Kemp Smith, 1929)
So.....valid or sound skeptical arguments? From his perspective, it may be either or both. With the premises from which the argument ensues, his conclusions follow logically. But that’s not really what should be asked, given the professed notion that reason and thought in general is not to be considered of greater import than experience, with which the empiricist philosophy of the day concerned itself. If reason and thought are given more substantial influence, experience must release some of its influence, which indicates Hume’s initial premises, while not exactly false, where at the very least, incomplete, as they are predicated on insufficiently explanatory conditions.
Hume wasn’t so much wrong as uninformed. And he was uninformed because, as a philosopher, he didn’t allow himself to think deeply enough to recognize the power reason actually has, a priori. In effect, he didn’t inform himself. He came so close, in the affirmative, in his argument on the missing shade of blue, which he professed a mind enabled to supply, yet in the negative, failed to recognize that same principle with respect to arguments in, e.g., geometry, insofar as he professed the mind has no power to arrive at the sum of interior angles synthetically. Which is exactly how the mind, or pure reason, supplies the missing shade.
Hume’s philosophy wasn’t so much refuted, as it was expanded.