The Dis-Unity of Humean Space

My aim in this paper is to explore some metaphysical and psychological implications of the (contentious) idealist interpretation of the belief in external objects ("bodies") Hume ascribes to us in the Treatise. More specifically, I will argue that the interpretation commits Hume to the cl...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ruth Weintraub
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Philosophie.ch 2021-03-01
Series:Dialectica
Online Access:https://dialectica.philosophie.ch/dialectica/article/view/37
Description
Summary:My aim in this paper is to explore some metaphysical and psychological implications of the (contentious) idealist interpretation of the belief in external objects ("bodies") Hume ascribes to us in the Treatise. More specifically, I will argue that the interpretation commits Hume to the claim that space is spatially fragmented, both synchronically and (even more so) diachronically, and renders Hume incapable of allowing for all the spatial thoughts we think we can have. But (perhaps surprisingly) it does not impugn Hume's view of causation.
ISSN:0012-2017
1746-8361