Description |
lvi, 198 pages ; 21 cm |
Series |
The Library of liberal arts ; 49 |
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Library of liberal arts ; 49
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Contents |
An enquiry concerning human understanding -- Of the different species of philosophy -- Of the origin of ideas -- Of the association of ideas -- Skeptical doubts concerning the operations of the understanding -- Skeptical solution of these doubts -- Of probability -- Of the idea of necessary connection -- Of liberty and necessity -- Of the reason of animals -- Of miracles -- Of a particular providence and of a future state -- Of the academical or skeptical philosophy -- Appendix -- "Why a cause is always necessary" (from the Treatise of human nature, Book I, Part III, Section III) -- An abstract of a treatise of human nature |
Notes |
Originally published under title: Philosophical essays concerning human understanding |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references |
Subject |
Anthropology -- Philosophy.
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Knowledge, Theory of -- Early works to 1800.
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Knowledge, Theory of.
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Author |
Hendel, Charles William, 1890-1982, editor, author of introduction
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Hume, David, 1711-1776.
Abstract of a Treatise of human nature
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LC no. |
84214123 |
ISBN |
0672602180 |
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9780672602184 |
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