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  • [[Image:Hume.jpg|thumb|right|Statue of David Hume. ''"Man is a reasonable being; and as such, receives from science his prope '''David Hume''' (April 26, 1711 – August 25, 1776) was a Scottish [[philosophy|philoso
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  • *[http://www.1902encyclopedia.com/H/HUM/david-hume.html David Hume]] article in 1902 edition of ''Encyclopaedia Britannica.''(...''"the most s *''The Life of David Hume, Esq. Written by Himself'' (London, W. Strahan & T. Caddell, 1777).
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  • :[http://www.iep.utm.edu/h/humelife.htm David Hume (1711-1776): Life and Writings] ...ww.electricscotland.com/history/other/hume_david1.htmnet Significant Scots David Hume] ElectricScotland.com
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Page text matches

  • Section of [[David Hume|Hume's]] ''[[An Enquiry concerning Human Understanding|Enquiry concerning H
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  • :[http://www.iep.utm.edu/h/humelife.htm David Hume (1711-1776): Life and Writings] ...ww.electricscotland.com/history/other/hume_david1.htmnet Significant Scots David Hume] ElectricScotland.com
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  • {{r|David Hume}}
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  • *[http://www.iep.utm.edu/h/humelife.htm David Hume (1711-1776): Life and Writings] Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy; includ
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  • {{rpl|David Hume}}
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  • {{r|David Hume||**}}
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  • ...rians. In adulthood, Hutcheson was a major influence on [[Adam Smith]], [[David Hume]] and others.
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  • * 1742 [[David Hume]]'s ''Essays, Moral, Political, and Literary''[http://www.econlib.org/libr
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  • == David Hume's views of miracles ==
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  • "'''Of Miracles'''" is the title of Section X of [[David Hume]]'s ''[[An Enquiry concerning Human Understanding]]'' (1748). *David Hume ''Of Miracles'' (introduction by [[Anthony Flew]]). La Salle, Illinois: Ope
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  • ...ion where he endorsed an account using sense-data, and the philosophy of [[David Hume]]. Ayer was Grote Professor of Mind and Logic at the [[University of London
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  • {{r|David Hume}}
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  • *[http://www.1902encyclopedia.com/H/HUM/david-hume.html David Hume]] article in 1902 edition of ''Encyclopaedia Britannica.''(...''"the most s *''The Life of David Hume, Esq. Written by Himself'' (London, W. Strahan & T. Caddell, 1777).
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  • ...teney, the ''Assassin'', Andrew Crosbie and the ''Assassin’s Assessor'', [[David Hume]] "without whose assent nothing could be done, so that between "plus" and " ...undas, [[Adam Ferguson]], Lord Elibank, Sir John Dalrymple, [[John Home]], David Hume and his brother John, [[William Robertson]], [[Hugh Blair]], the Duke of Bu
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  • ...1772). The work built on [[Francis Bacon]]’s philosophy of medicine, and [[David Hume]]’s science of morals, and was particularly influenced by Hume's "princip
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  • Although [[William Paley]] wrote after [[David Hume]] had presented most of the key criticisms of the argument, it is his versi *David Hume ''Dialogues concerning Natural Religion''
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  • {{r|David Hume}}
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  • *Mossner, E.C. (1980) ''The Life of David Hume.'' 2nd edition. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
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  • [[Image:Hume.jpg|thumb|right|Statue of David Hume. ''"Man is a reasonable being; and as such, receives from science his prope '''David Hume''' (April 26, 1711 – August 25, 1776) was a Scottish [[philosophy|philoso
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  • ...employed about in thinking; and I could not avoid frequently using it." [[David Hume]] would later restrict this definition to cover mental reconstructions of p
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  • {{rpl|David Hume}}
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  • ...m antiquity have questioned whether or not induction leads to knowledge. [[David Hume]] argued in ''An Enquiry concerning Human Understanding'' that induction ne
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  • ...loyed as a tutor by [[Henry Home, Lord Kames]], during which time he met [[David Hume]], before becoming an advocate in 1760. In 1761 he was appointed Regius Pro
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  • ...the [[Porteous Riots]] of 1736, and his friendship with [[Adam Smith]], [[David Hume]], [[Charles Townshend]] and [[John Home]], the dramatist, for witnessing t ...attie]], which last was more an orator than a philosopher; together with [[David Hume]], whose works, though dangerous and heretical, illustrated the science, an
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  • ...argument too, including being common usage.) I also am very pleased that (David Hume) is contributing vigorously to other articles connecting with this, and rec
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  • * [[David Hume|Hume, David]]. ''A Treatise of Human Nature''
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  • ...ded as one of the founding fathers of [[sociology]]. Ferguson succeeded [[David Hume]] as librarian to the Faculty of Advocates in [[Edinburgh]]. He held succe ...e, he returned to [[University of Edinburgh]] where in 1757 he succeeded [[David Hume]] as librarian to the Faculty of Advocates, but soon relinquished this offi
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  • ...g some of the uncommonsensical philosophers who preceded him, especially [[David Hume]]. For his part, Hume dismissed Beattie as a "silly, bigoted fellow," alth
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  • [[David Hume]] in many ways was a forerunner of the verification principle; he argued th
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  • ...ose members included [[Joseph Black]], [[Adam Ferguson]], [[John Home]], [[David Hume]] and [[Adam Smith]]
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  • ...hemistry, and sociology. The central figures were [[Francis Hutcheson]], [[David Hume]], [[Adam Smith]], [[Robert Burns]], [[Adam Ferguson]], and [[James Hutton] The philosophical issues of causality were explored in depth by [[David Hume]]. He revered the new science of Copernicus, Bacon, Galileo, Kepler, Boyle,
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  • {{rpl|David Hume}}
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  • ...ightenment, embodied by such thinkers as Francis Hutcheson, Adam Smith and David Hume, paved the way for Scottish and, Herman argues, global modernity.
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  • ...nuel Kant|Kant]], [[Jeremy Bentham|Bentham]], [[John Stuart Mill|Mill]], [[David Hume|Hume]],and [[Frederick Nietzsche|Nietzsche]].
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  • ...became a close friend of the geologist [[James Hutton]], the philosopher [[David Hume]], the mathematician [[John Playfair]] (1748 - 1819) and other leading memb
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  • ...0) asserted the sovereignty of common sense while attacking the ideas of [[David Hume]] (1711-1776), the major philosopher of the time. The work earned him a doc
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  • ...ome, was town-clerk at Leith. Home was a close friend of the philosopher [[David Hume]], to whom he was related. In 1756, while employed as a minister at Athelst David Hume summed up his admiration for Douglas by saying that his friend possessed "t
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  • ...slikes; it is reasonable to expect that other people will agree with them. David Hume saw judgements of beauty in a way not so different from this, arising from
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  • ...ime in [[Edinburgh]] he forged lasting friendships with, amongst others, [[David Hume]], [[Adam Smith]], [[Adam Fergusson]] and [[John Home]]. While at Universit
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  • In 1739, [[David Hume]] in his ''[[A Treatise of Human Nature]]'' directed his attention to the c {{cite web |author=CM Lorkowski |date=November 7, 2010 |title=David Hume: Causation |url=http://www.iep.utm.edu/hume-cau/ |work=Internet Encyclopedi
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  • ...aron de l’Aulne Turgot|Turgot]] and [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]] in France; [[David Hume]] and [[Adam Smith]] in Scotland; [[John Locke]], [[Edward Gibbon]], [[Samu
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  • 1711 [[David Hume]] (1711-1776) Scottish philosopher, and historian. [[History of economic thought#David Hume|early economist]]. Opponent of [[merchantilism]] and of government interven
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  • ...f [[James Watt]]. Black was a member of the [[Poker Club]] and friend of [[David Hume]], [[Adam Smith]], [[James Hutton]] and other leading figures of the [[Scot ...a career as a medical doctor, and his patients included the philosopher [[David Hume]]. He was also consulted over the illness of the nurse of Walter Scott, the
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  • ...ntitled the "Epigoniad, a poem in nine books". Wilkie's friends included [[David Hume]], [[Adam Smith]] and [[John Home]]. According to Henry Mackenzie (1745-183
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  • ...''Republican'', Queen Mab, [[Voltaire]]'s ''Philosophical Dictionary'', [[David Hume|Hume]]'s ''Essays'', the ''Liberal'', Odelebene's ''Campaign in Saxony'', O
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  • ...f is a point some philosophers have faulted Descartes for not doubting. [[David Hume]], for example, thought that it was possible to conceive of a "bundle" of t
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  • ...ce, including [[René Descartes]]. Other philosophers have rejected this: [[David Hume]] and [[Immanuel Kant]] both reject the claim that things can 'necessarily The question of miracles is one that exercised David Hume, who argued that it is extremely difficult to accept the testimony of eyewi
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  • .... Potkay, "Theorizing Civic Eloquence in the Early Republic: The Road from David Hume to John Quincy Adams," ''Early American Literature'' (1999) 34(2): 147-170. ..., Adam S. "Theorizing Civic Eloquence in the Early Republic: the Road from David Hume to John Quincy Adams." ''Early American Literature'' (1999) 34(2): 147-170.
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  • ...ce''); Adam Ferguson (''An Essay on the History of Civil Society''), 1767; David Hume (1711-1776) (''Of the Original Contract'', 1748; (''On Money''), 1752; (''O ===David Hume and the Scottish Enlightenment===
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  • ...d in his ''Wealth of Nations''. In about 1750 he met the [[philosopher]] [[David Hume]], who was his senior by over a decade. The alignments of opinion that can ...rative offer from Charles Townshend (who had been introduced to Smith by [[David Hume]]), to tutor his stepson, the young Duke of Buccleuch. Smith resigned his p
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  • <tr><th>Dimanche<th>28<td>[[Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|Mozart]]<td>[[David Hume|Hume]]<td>[[Oliver Cromwell|Cromwell]]<td>[[Franz Joseph Gall|Gall]]
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  • ...horns-of-a-dilemma' formulation is used to frame Russell's discussion of [[David Hume]]:<ref name=Russell/><ref name=Hume/> ...{{cite web |title=An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding (1777) |author=David Hume |work=Project Gutenberg |url=http://www.gutenberg.org/files/9662/9662-h/966
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  • ...uke of Medina Sidonia as an incompetent seaman. In the [[Enlightenment]] [[David Hume]] (1711-76) dropped divine favor and stressed the leadership of Elizabeth
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  • ...ne of the three most famous British Empiricists (with [[John Locke]] and [[David Hume]]). He is best known for developing an early form of [[idealism]], accordi
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  • ...his to place decisions in various categories, in the manner described by [[David Hume]]? Hume adopts the view that moral judgments are determined by character, w ...necessity." {{cite web |author=CM Lorkowski |date=November 7, 2010 |title=David Hume: Causation |url=http://www.iep.utm.edu/hume-cau/ |work=Internet Encyclopedi
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  • :1711: [[David Hume]] (1711-1776) Scottish philosopher, economist, and historian. He is conside
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  • ...tacked, at different times in history, as being futile and overly vague. [[David Hume]] and [[Immanuel Kant]] both prescribed a limited role to the subject and a
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  • ...hing can be known with certainty except what has actually been observed. [[David Hume]] took empiricism to the skeptical extreme; among his positions was that th
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  • ...veloper of the [[empiricism]] of [[John Locke]], [[George Berkeley]] and [[David Hume]], and of the [[utilitarianism]] of [[Jeremy Bentham]], he made major contr
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  • ...by such brilliant thinkers as [[Francis Hutcheson]], [[Adam Smith]] and [[David Hume]], paved the way for the modernization of Scotland and [[Atlantic History|t
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  • ...1766. His wealthy father, educated at Oxford and a friend and admirer of [[David Hume]] and [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]], was a critic of the existing educational s ...h much more evidence. Malthus acknowledged his debts to the writings of [[David Hume]], [[Robert Wallace]], [[Adam Smith]], and [[Richard Price]], among others.
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  • Kant's philosophy is set against that of [[David Hume]]'s empiricism and [[Gottfried Leibniz]]'s rationalism. In the ''Critique o
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  • ...[Edinburgh]], including the economist [[Adam Smith]] and the philosopher [[David Hume]], Cullen developed a theory of 'sympathy', a kind of '[[vitalism vital for
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  • ...[natural theology]]. This became a point of attack for thinkers such as [[David Hume]] as they studied the "natural history of religion". ===David Hume===
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  • ...became deputy librarian for the Faculty of Advocates, by the kindness of [[David Hume]]. He later became estranged from Hume, and defended [[James Beattie]]'s at
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  • Among his contributions to philosophy is his answer to [[David Hume]]'s [[Problem of induction|Problem of Induction]]. According to Hume, just
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  • ...hilosophers adopted Descartes' doubt with a vengeance. Most prominently, [[David Hume]] doubted the concept of [[causality]] and was unable to "clearly know" it
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  • ...rd (1792-1839); James Gregory (1638-1675); Thomas Henderson (1798-1844); [[David Hume]] (1711-1776); [[James Hutton]] (1726-1797); Robert Thornton Ayton Innes (1
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  • ...dered to have originated in the late eighteenth century with the work of [[David Hume]] and [[Adam Smith]], the founders of classical economics. The nineteent ===David Hume===
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  • ...Hobbes|Hobbes]], [[John Locke|Locke]], [[George Berkeley|Berkeley]], and [[David Hume|Hume]].
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  • *[[David Hume]] (1711-1776)<ref>David Hume, '' The History of England: From the Invasion of Julius Cæsar to the Abdic
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  • ...o the help of the Prince of [[Conti]]) where he arrived in January 1766. [[David Hume]], a Scottish philosopher, took him under his wing. Rousseau however began
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  • ...dered to have originated in the late eighteenth century with the work of [[David Hume]] and [[Adam Smith]], the founders of classical economics. The nineteent ===David Hume===
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  • ...the portraits on display are Allan Ramsay’s portrait of the philosopher [[David Hume]], Alexander Nasmyth’s portrait of [[Robert Burns]] and Sir Henry Raeburn
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  • ...terus]] and [[Pierre Gassendi]], and later by such philosophers as Kant, [[David Hume]], and [[Gottlob Frege]].
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  • * Statue of [[David Hume]], philosopher
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  • [[Image:Hume.jpg|thumb|right|Statue of [[David Hume]]. ''"Man is a reasonable being; and as such, receives from science his pro [[David Hume|Hume]] recognised clearly the difficulties in gaining a general understandi
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  • [[Image:Hume.jpg|thumb|right|Statue of [[David Hume]]. ''"Man is a reasonable being; and as such, receives from science his pro [[David Hume|Hume]] recognised clearly the difficulties in gaining a general understandi
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  • ...[Scottish Enlightenment]] (a group which also included [[Adam Smith]], , [[David Hume]] and other major figures). Ferguson saw development of a[[commercial state
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  • ...[Scottish Enlightenment]] (a group which also included [[Adam Smith]], , [[David Hume]] and other major figures). Ferguson saw development of a [[commercial stat
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  • ...Descartes]], [[Baruch Spinoza]], [[Gottfried Leibniz]], [[John Locke]], [[David Hume]], [[George Berkeley]], [[Immanuel Kant]], [[Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel]
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  • :'''1711''': [[David Hume]], the philosopher who "ruined Philosophy and Faith" is born
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  • *[http://www.anselm.edu/homepage/dbanach/dnr.htm text of David Hume, ''Dialogues concerning Natural Religion'']; see especially Parts II-VIII f
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  • ...bout the justification of the state in modern political thought (neither [[David Hume]] nor [[John Stuart Mill]] thought it necessary to engage in such an exerci
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  • | title = David Hume and the Suppression of Atheism
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  • {{Image|Hume2.JPG|left|200px|Statue of David Hume, on the Royal Mile.}} ...of the [[Scottish Enlightenment]], home to many great thinkers including [[David Hume]] (1711-1776) who according to RL Stevenson, "ruined Philosophy and Faith"
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  • ...lightenment]] thinkers continued with the interest, when [[John Locke]], [[David Hume]], [[Immanuel Kant]], [[Charles de Secondat, baron de Montesquieu|Charles M
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  • 1711 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; [[David Hume]][http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/hume/] (1711-1776) ''A Treatise of Huma
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  • ...by such brilliant thinkers as [[Francis Hutcheson]], [[Adam Smith]] and [[David Hume]], paved the way for the modernization of Scotland and [[Atlantic History|t
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  • {{Image|Hume.jpg|right|300px|Statue of [[David Hume]]. ''"Man is a reasonable being; and as such, receives from science his pro
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  • <onlyinclude>{{Image|Hume.jpg|right|300px|Statue of [[David Hume]]. ''"Man is a reasonable being; and as such, receives from science his pro
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  • ...ity. Enlightenment thinkers like historian-philosophers [[Voltaire]] and [[David Hume]] denounced the crusades, as did the great historian of Byzantium [[Edward
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  • ...taphysics of Morals'', 42 (par. 434)</ref> Austin and Bentham, following [[David Hume]] thought this conflated what [[Is-ought problem|"is" and what "ought to be
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