Epistemology: Hume's Skepticism and Induction Part 1 발음듣기
Epistemology: Hume's Skepticism and Induction Part 1
(intro music) My name is Daniel Greco and I'm an assistant professor of philosophy at Yale University.발음듣기
Today's video will concern a topic in epistemology, which is the branch of philosophy that deals with the study of knowledge.발음듣기
In particular, I'll discuss a version of skepticism, which is the idea that we know a lot less than we ordinarily take ourselves to.발음듣기
The sort of skepticism I'll discuss is due to David Hume, who was an eighteenth-century Scottish philosopher and historian, and it targets our knowledge of the unobserved.발음듣기
So we ordinarily take ourselves to know lots about things that we haven't directly observed.발음듣기
And yet I, and I take it you, ordinarily take myself to know all sorts of things about these matters.발음듣기
For instance, I know that all triangles, even triangles I haven't yet observed, have three sides.발음듣기
Or I know that next year, if I have two apples and two oranges, I'll have four pieces of fruit.발음듣기
Or try to imagine a situation where I have two apples and two oranges, nothing else, but where I don't have four pieces of fruit.발음듣기
Relations of ideas have to be true, no matter how the world turns out. They're necessary truths.발음듣기
To quote Hume, he said that propositions of this kind are discoverable by the mere operation of thought, without dependence on what is anywhere existent in the universe.발음듣기
If some claim is a relation of ideas, then it will be true no matter what the world is like.발음듣기
So in order to know that it's true, we don't need to go out and gather evidence about what the world is like.발음듣기
The evidence might tell us the world is this way rather than that way, but no matter what way the world is like, all triangles will have three sides.발음듣기
So if anything at all is required to know that a relation of ideas is true, it's just understanding.발음듣기
Okay, contrast relations of ideas with another class of claims that Hume called "matters of fact."발음듣기
So these claims are true, both of them, but their denials are not inconceivable or contradictory.발음듣기
Or you could imagine that I have no pets at all, including no fluffy puppy, even though, in fact, I do.발음듣기
So because these claims have denials that aren't contradictory, because you can conceive that they're false, it's not enough to just understand what they mean to see that they're true.발음듣기
You have to go out and make some observations, see that the world is one way, rather than another way.발음듣기
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