Реферат: Hume An Enquiry Concerning The Principles Of
Hume is saying that
unless the person, or criminal in this case, sincerely believes in what he wants to do,
he will not be able to
motivate the action. In other words, unless the sentiment is there, the action cannot be
willed into being.
Hence, the sentiment is the driving force behind the action.
Hume does not however say that reason is incapable of determining wether an action
is virtuous
or vicious (moral or immoral), but instead he tries to say that the reason for the
morality of an action does
not dictate the execution or perversion of an act so far as determination of wether the
action is executed
or not. In simpler terms, reason has it's place in determining morality, but it is not in
the motivation of an
action. Motivation must come from the heart, or better yet, from within the person; from
their beliefs.
Reason merely allows the person to make moral distinctions. Without reason, there
would be no morality.
Without reason, one moral clause would not be differentiable from another. That is to
say that below all
morals, there must be some underlying truth because "Truth is disputable; not taste"
(p.14). If truth were
not disputable, there would be no way to prove that a truth was just that... a truth. To
make an analogy to
mathematics, truth is a function of reason, whereas taste is a function of sentiment.
Sentiment is a
function of the individual whereas reason is a function of the universe.
The universe as a whole must follow reason, but the catch is that each individual's
universe is