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Imagination in Hume's Treatise and Enquiry concerning the Human Understanding1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 February 2009

E. J. Furlong
Affiliation:
Trinity College, Dublin

Extract

“Imagination doth denote the mind active”, said Berkeley. And the activity of the mind, finite as well as infinite, was a cardinal point in his philosophy. Imagination showed that minds, or spirits, to use the term Berkeley preferred, were causal agents.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 1961

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References

2 A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge, § 33.

3 Treatise, S. 632, E.I. 159. See also his Enquiry Concerning the Human Understanding, 53. [S. = The Selby-Bigge edition. E.I. = The Everyman's edition, Vol. 1. The Enquiry references are to paragraphs.]Google Scholar

4 Treatise, I. I.3.

5 Treatise, S.3,18 f.;E.II,42 f.

6 Italics mine, S. 198, E.I. 192.

7 S. 427, E.II, 137.

8 Smith, N. Kemp, The Philosophy of David Hume, pp.459–63.Google Scholar

9 J Op.cit., p.459.

10 S.265, E.I.250.

11 S.225, E.I. 215.

12 From S.225, E.I.215, and S.265, E.I.250.

13 E.I.118.

14 E.I.118.

15 E.I.250.

16 Op.cit., p.463.

17 E.I.250.

18 S. 225, E.I.215.

19 E.I. 125.

20 E.I,250.

21 E.I.118.

22 Treatise, S. 48, E.I.54.

23 S.198, E.I.192.

24 Proceedings of the Twelfth International Congress of Philosophy.