My last two posts have been on the topic of theology, so it
thought it was time for a refreshing breath of philosophy, specifically atheist
philosophy from David Hume.
Hume is credited with the ontological thought known as bundle
theory, bundle theory states that every (at least) tangible thing in
existence is nothing more than a sum of its properties and that the actual
object does not really exist. This at first glance this position seems
completely nonsensical however Hume then challenges us to think of an object
without its properties, his example was an apple, but the activity works with
any object. Hume therefore arrived at the idea that no object really exists.
This also stretches beyond the inanimate and can be directly applied to a human
being such as yourself (unless of course my blog has a much wider audience than
I expect!) this means that you don't exist other than as a set of senses that
you are made up of, Hume concluded from this that there is no sense of self.
This was Hume's way of telling René Descartes
that he was wrong in his position which he summed up by saying “Cogito ergo
sum” or to those of you who aren't familiar with Descartes (or Latin) “I think
therefore I am”, Descartes believed that the world around us might be an
illusion or that we might be dreaming of our world, but at least if we are
seeing the illusion or dreaming we are thinking, ergo we exist. Both have
strong arguments however I feel obliged to go with Descartes otherwise I must
concede that I do not exist, however Nietzsche would argue that I am accepting
Descartes truth because it comforts me to believe it, rather than its actual
truth or falsehood.
Hume also believed in sense
data, a branch of John Locke's empirical scepticism, stating that all
knowledge is meaningless unless it originates from human experience and that
the real world (if there even is one!) is unknowable, as in empiricism the only
knowledge we can truly have is derived from the senses as this as close as we
can ever get to what we call “truth”, this is why Hume was an atheist as he
believed it was impossible to arrive at God through this process of sense data.
Although Hume believed in sense data he found himself constantly puzzled by the
problem of induction, this is the idea that all scientific method is based on a
logical fallacy, as just because we observe something we can't assume it's
going to happen again, no matter how many times it appears to happen, so
essentially all the laws of physics are unreliable. For example if you live
your whole life only seeing white cups, you might find it logical to assume
that all cups are white until someone gives you a handful of multi-coloured
cups to which you would have to draw into question all you think you know about ceramics. Although
Hume may have been confused by this defective induction modern scientists don't
seem too bothered about it because it seems to work, and if it doesn’t we can
always change it later.
"That the sun will not rise tomorrow is no less intelligible a proposition, and implies no more contradiction, than the affirmation, that it will rise." - David Hume.
"That the sun will not rise tomorrow is no less intelligible a proposition, and implies no more contradiction, than the affirmation, that it will rise." - David Hume.