One of the key debates in philosophy is one between the schools of Empiricism and Rationalism. Their opposition to each other stems from a fundamental disagreement about what kind of knowledge exists and how we access it. One empiricist, David Hume, developed a fairly convincing account which is now called ‘Hume’s Fork’. But what exactly does it say, and how useful is it as a theory?
Camden Conversations (Whitman)
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Romeo and Juliet (Shakespeare)
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Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding (Hume)
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The Portable John Adams (Adams)
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Why I am not a Christian (Russell)
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The General Theory of Employment (Keynes)
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Miles
[Music: ‘Ephemera’ by Scott Buckley, www.scottbuckley.com.au]
5 июл 2024