And what about Hamann? — Agustino
Hamann used the notion of ‘Prosopopoeia’, or personification, as an image of what can happen in philosophical reflection. In a medieval morality or mystery play, the experience of being chaste or being lustful is transformed from a way of acting or feeling into a dramatic character who then speaks and acts as a personification of that quality.
Yes, but those are just Hume's metaphysical positions. There's more to Hume than that. Two other factors I can think of:
• Ethics — Agustino
>:O Fine, but that's not Hume's only contribution to ethics. Three main ones that come to mind:"There's no necessary connection between an 'is' and an 'ought'" -- > skepticism about morality — lambda
And whom Hegel referred to as a "penetrating genius" and Kierkegaard called, along with Socrates, "perhaps [the] most brilliant minds of all time". Hamann's greatness consist principally in:(whom Goethe referred to as "the brightest mind of his day) — John
More here on page 202-206.Kant made reason the rule of his life and the source of his philosophy; Hamann found the source of both in his heart. While Kant dreaded enthusiasm in religion, and suspected in it superstition and fanaticism, Hamann reveled in enthusiasm; and he believed in revelation, miracles, and worship, differing also in these points from the philosopher. In some respects they complemented each other; but the repelling elements were too strong to make them fully sympathetic. The difference in their stand-points, however, makes Hamman’s views of Kant all the more interesting
The problem with reason, for Hamann, was that reason set the standards, and then installed itself as some kind of tribunal that had the authority to judge and decide on how things stand. But reason itself was the contingent product of language and tradition - reason was historical (an idea further explored by Hegel, Heidegger, and Wittgenstein). So Hamann recognised that we cannot think outside of reason - BUT the bounds of reason are determined historically, and therefore our thinking ability itself is limited - man is finite. In certain epochs certain truths are obscured - there is no perfect rationality, when something is revealed, something else becomes hidden (Heidegger) - so the march of reason (The Enlightenment) is alike the horse chasing the carrot. According to Hamann, Kant too was fooled by reason, and didn't go far enough. Hamann offered a better and stronger critique of pure reason than Kant.I think Hamann saw skepticism and dogmatism as being the only two real alternatives for reason, anything else would be, for him, an illusory dream of reason and would turn out to be nothing more than another dogmatism in disguise. — John
he problem with reason, for Hamann, was that reason set the standards, and then installed itself as some kind of tribunal that had the authority to judge and decide on how things stand. But reason itself was the contingent product of language and tradition - reason was historical — Agustino
Who decides that it's the standard that truth claims are obliged to meet? Reason? That's like playing at the Casino - the House always wins (because it sets the rules).Reason is sovereign, because it is the standard that truth claims are obliged to meet, not because it is imbued with some authority on external grounds. — Wayfarer
How did Hume explain the observed fact that when you drop an apple it always falls down? That it's a coincidence? — litewave
• Understanding reason as emerging from tradition, and thus never being wholly independent of it.
• Foreshadowing the dependence of reason upon language - something that only fully comes into focus with Ludwig Wittgenstein.
• Comprehending that skepticism with regards to reason and metaphysics is as equally theistic as it is atheistic. — Agustino
What is the warrant for induction, other than the customary association of effects with causes (and so on)? Those were the questions he was considering. — Wayfarer
But it seems he at least acknowledged there are stable regularities in nature. — litewave
I've never thought of Hume as a skeptic. — Srap Tasmaner
Beiser cites Kant as believing that all rationalist philosophy must, if followed to its logical conclusion, result in Spinozism; which in turn must result in atheism. — John
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