Hume's claim is that we don't see causation. We only see invariant correlation, and then infer causation – and that this inference isn't deduction. — Michael
Hume's claim is that we don't see causation. We only see invariant correlation, and then infer causation – and that this inference isn't deduction. — Michael
I think the reduction of explanation to description is indicative that Hume's reasoning was flawed. Either he was wrong that we don't perceive causation, or he was wrong in excluding inference as a source of knowledge. — Marchesk
This is why it is necessary to understand why Kant said that Hume had 'awoken him from his dogmatic slumbers', and what he did as a result. That was central to Kant's philosophical enterprise. So only considering what Hume had to say about it, is only considering the prologue to Kant's response. — Wayfarer
So Kant realized that Hume's argument was disastrous to reason, and something more needed to be said. — Marchesk
Kant concludes, in § 30, by stating that we are now in possession of “a complete solution of the Humean problem” (4, 313; 66)—which, Kant adds, “rescues the a priori origin of the pure concepts of the understanding and the validity of the general laws of nature as laws of the understanding, in such a way that their use is limited only to experience, because their possibility has its ground merely in the relation of the understanding to experience, however, not in such a way that they are derived from experience, but that experience is derived from them, a completely reversed kind of connection which never occurred to Hume”
but Kant showed that even 'bare experience' is dependent on the categories of understanding, the intuitions, and the other constituents of reason, without which there can be no experience. — Wayfarer
Which means that all scientific explanation reduces to description. Predictive success is a fluke, without reason, as are all conjoined events. It's just one damned thing after another.
I think the reduction of explanation to description is indicative that Hume's reasoning was flawed. Either he was wrong that we don't perceive causation, or he was wrong in excluding inference as a source of knowledge. — Marchesk
To put it in modern terms, the mind evolved to expect causal explanations, because the world is causal, and creatures who understand that are more fit. — Marchesk
Notice how habit is meant to explain our confidence in causality. A habit is a causal psychological explanation for some behavior. Hume invoked causality to explain our faith in it!
This contradiction reveals a fact about explanation. You cannot have any explanation without causation. — Marchesk
This contradiction reveals a fact about explanation. You cannot have any explanation without causation. The best you can do is describe how events have been conjoined up to this point. Nothing happens for any reason, it just is, and it might not be the case tomorrow. — Marchesk
Or if this necessity is explained by other more general necessities ("laws"), then we still always have some irreducible or "prime" necessities that just are what they are for no reason at all. — Ignignot
Actually, I was trying to say (perhaps ineloquently) that something is indeed fundamentally "brute." These are the "prime" necessary connections. They are merely descriptive. "That's just the way things are." — Ignignot
suppose a consequence of my view is that the world must remain fundamentally "mysterious" or "miraculous" in the sense that it cannot be explained as a whole. — Ignignot
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