- Author(s): David Pears
- ISBN: 9780198751007
- Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
- Date: 21 Feb 1991
- Pages: 224
theory of truth and evidence. Steering a middle course between these positions, Pears argues that Hume's theory of ideas serves both functions. He examines in detail its application to three difficult problems: causation, personal identity, and sense perception. Hume's solutions, Pears argues,
are not theories that can be given a place in standard classification of philosophical theories, but rather depend upon a subtle form of naturalism not altogether unlike Wittgenstein's naturalism. A clearly written and argued study, Hume's System will be of special interest to students and scholars
of the history of philosophy.
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