Concept Empiricism By the end of today you should be able to: 1) Explain more fully what Concept Empiricism is and the arguments postulated by John Locke.

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Presentation transcript:

Concept Empiricism By the end of today you should be able to: 1) Explain more fully what Concept Empiricism is and the arguments postulated by John Locke and David Hume (using the proper terminology).

O Our mind is a Tabula Rasa (blank slate) – it contains no ideas (thoughts or concepts). NO INNATE IDEAS. This is shown if you observe new born babies. O All our ideas derive from one of two sources: 1. Sensation: Our experience of objects outside the mind, perceived through the senses. This gives us ideas of ‘sensible qualities’. 2. Reflection: our experience of ‘internal operations of our minds’, gained through introspection or an awareness of what the mind is doing. This provides the ideas of perception, thinking, willing and so on. These ideas may well arrive later in childhood. O Locke uses the term ‘idea’ to cover sensations and concepts! (We will use the term ‘concept’ and ‘idea’ interchangeably). John Locke’s Concept Empiricism

David Hume’s Concept Empiricism O Read Section 2 of Hume’s An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding O Discuss in your groups what Hume is arguing and make notes.

O What we are immediately and directly aware of are ‘perceptions’. O ‘Perceptions’ are divided into ‘impressions’ and ‘ideas’, the difference between the two being marked by a difference of ‘forcefulness’ and ‘vivacity’, so that impressions relate roughly to ‘feeling’ (or ‘sensing’) and ideas to ‘thinking’. O Hume, following Locke, divides impressions into those of ‘sensation’ and those of ‘reflection’. Impressions of sensation derive from our senses, impressions of reflection derive from our experience of mind, including emotions. O Hume argues that ideas are ‘faint copies’ of impressions. David Hume’s Concept Empiricism Impressions = the more lively sensations that we have when we see or hear or feel or love or hate. Ideas = the less lively sensations that we have when we think about seeing, hearing, feeling etc.

O Read Chapter 2 from Locke’s second Book in An Essay Concerning Human Understanding. O Read from the bottom of p.107 – 109 of Cardinal. Simple and Complex Concepts So… how do we form ideas of things we have never experienced?

O How do we form ideas of things we have never experienced? Simple and Complex Concepts Hume’s copy principle This says: all of our ideas are copies of our impressions. What it means is that all of our ideas are built up from copies of our impressions, by combining, separating, augmenting and diminishing them.

Concept Empiricism… ALL OF OUR IDEAS, OUR CONCEPTS, THOUGHTS AND IMAGINATION MUST HAVE COME FROM OUR IMPRESSIONS.!

Homework: 1)In your groups you will prepare a 2 minute presentation on the following so you can teach the rest of the group: Martha and Lily: How Hume’s Empiricism influenced his ideas on God (p.111 of Cardinal). Elisa and Ellie : How Hume’s Empiricism influenced his ideas on The Self and Morality (p of Cardinal). Pippa and Alex: How Hume’s Empiricism influenced his ideas on Causation ( )

O By the end of today you should be able to: 1) Further explain what Concept Empiricism is and the arguments postulated by John Locke and David Hume (using the proper terminology).