“ Belief, being a lively conception, can never be entire, where it is not founded on something natural and easy. ”
David Hume, A Treatise of Human Nature (1738). copy citation
Author | David Hume |
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Source | A Treatise of Human Nature |
Topic | belief conception |
Date | 1738 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | |
Weblink | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/4705/4705-h/4705-h.htm |
Context
“No wonder, then, the conviction, which arises from a subtile reasoning, diminishes in proportion to the efforts, which the imagination makes to enter into the reasoning, and to conceive it in all its parts. Belief, being a lively conception, can never be entire, where it is not founded on something natural and easy.
This I take to be the true state of the question, and cannot approve of that expeditious way, which some take with the sceptics, to reject at once all their arguments without enquiry or examination.”
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