Scepticism and Belief in Hume's Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion / by Stanley Tweyman.

In the pages that follow, an attempt is made to examine those sections of the Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion which deal with the Argument from Design - the argument which purports to prove that certain observed similarities between the design of the world and machines of human contrivance cou...

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full Text (via Springer)
Main Author: Tweyman, Stanley
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 1986.
Series:International Archives of the History of Ideas/Archives Internationales D'Histoire des Idees ; 106.
Subjects:
Table of Contents:
  • 1. The Philosophic Background to Hume's Dialogues
  • Hume's Views on Reasoning
  • Scepticism
  • Natural Beliefs
  • 2. Introduction and Part I of Hume's Dialogues
  • I: Preliminary Discussion: Can There Be a Natural Theology?
  • 3. Hume's Dialogues: Part II
  • The Argument from Design is Presented
  • The Two Versions of the Argument from Design
  • Philo's Initial Criticisms of the Argument from Design
  • 4. Hume's Dialogues: Part III
  • Cleanthes' Illustrative Analogies
  • The Articulate Voice Illustration
  • The Living Vegetable Library Illustration
  • 5. Hume's Dialogues: Part IV
  • The First 'Inconvenience' of Anthropomorphism
  • 6. Hume's Dialogues: Part V
  • More 'Inconveniences' of Cleanthes' Anthropomorphism
  • 7. Hume's Dialogues: Parts VI-VIII
  • Competing Cosmogonies
  • 8. Hume's Dialogues: Part XII
  • Mitigated Scepticism and Natural Theology
  • The General Thesis Restated
  • Philo's Mitigated Scepticism
  • Correcting the 'Undistinguished' Pyrrhonian Doubts through 'Common Sense'
  • Correcting the 'Undistinguished' Pyrrhonian Doubts through 'Reflection'