Against the Current by Lilla Mark Hardy Henry Berlin Isaiah Hausheer Roger

Against the Current by Lilla Mark Hardy Henry Berlin Isaiah Hausheer Roger

Author:Lilla, Mark, Hardy, Henry, Berlin, Isaiah, Hausheer, Roger
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Published: 2013-03-10T16:00:00+00:00


* * *

1 xlviii/1.

1 W iii 190. 17.

1 lo. cit. (11/1).

2 B i 378. 7.

3 B v 265. 37.

4 B v 264. 36.

1 W ii 208. 20.

2 W iii 285. 15.

3 W ii 172. 21.

4 W ii 171. 15.

5 W ii 345. 11.

6 loc. cit. (13/1).

1 B vii 487. See also W iii 190. 23, B vi 331. 22, and cf. 210/1.

2 W ii 73–4.

1 Count Nikolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf. See Zinzendorf: Ueber Glauben und Leben, ed. Otto Herpel (Sannerz/Leipzig, 1925), 16.

1 B vii 155. 27.

2 B vii 167. 9. The last sentence is (approximately) quoted from W ii 73. 21.

3 David Hume, A Treatise of Human Nature, ed. L. A. Selby-Bigge (Oxford, 1888) (hereafter T), 183.

1 B iv 294. 7.

2 op. cit. (187/1), iii 23, note.

3 David Hume, Enquiries, ed. L. A. Selby-Bigge, 3rd ed., revised by P. H. Nidditch (Oxford, 1975) (hereafter E), 151.

1 B i 379. 30.

2 e.g. T 624; E 48–9; An Abstract of a Treatise of Human Nature, ed. J. M. Keynes and P. Sraffa (Cambridge, 1938), 18–21.

3 T 629.

1 B vii 176. 3. On this see W. M. Alexander, Johann Georg Hamann: Philosophy and Faith (The Hague, 1966), 130 ff.

2 Which Shirley Robin Letwin rightly stresses: see her article ‘Hume: Inventor of a New Task for Philosophy’, Political Theory 3 (1975), 134–58. For Hume’s phrase see Hume’s Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, ed. Norman Kemp Smith (Oxford, 1935) (hereafter D), 169.

1 The Natural History of Religion, section 15. Essays Moral, Political and Literary, ed. T. H. Green and T. H. Grose (London, 1875), ii 362.

2 ibid. section 12, 344.

1 B i 305. 18.

2 B iv 293. 36 (and see 172/1).

3 B i 355. 27.

4 ibid. 356.6.

1 B v 326. 14.

1 James Beattie, An Essay on the Nature and Immutability of Truth, in Opposition to Sophistry and Scepticism (1770), part 3, chapter 3, last paragraph.

2 D 60.

3 E 131.

1 loc. cit. (223/3).

2 B i 356. 19.

3 B i 380. 7; see Alexander, op. cit. (219/1), 152/2.

4 B i 380. 6.

1 10/1.

2 Kant’s friend, the English merchant, who lived in Königsberg.

3 B iv 205. 33.

1 loc. cit. (11/1).

2 E 151.

1 D 282.

4 W iii 29. 10.

2 B vii 167 (see also 171/1).

3 B vi 281. 11.

5 W ii 74. 2 (cf. 169/2).

6 B iv 294. 7, 9.

1 I have used the text published in Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi’s Werke (Leipzig, 1812, 1815) (hereafter J), ii 1–310.

1 J ii 1, quoting Blaise Pascal, Pensées no. 246 (in Brunschvicg’s numbering).

2 P. Merlan, ‘Kant, Hamann-Jacobi and Schelling on Hume’, Rivista critica di storia della filosofia 22 (1967), 484.

3 Something of this kind used to be argued by Whitehead and Stout, and it has had its later exponents.

1 Letter to Hamann, B v 56. 16.

2 T 629.

3 E 151.

4 J ii 152.

1 E 144–8.

2 Richard Wollheim (ed.), Hume on Religion (London, 1963), 23–4. [The phrase ‘the frame of nature’ is used several times in Hume’s ‘The Natural History of Religion’ (1757).]

3 In parts 1, 9 and 12, D 170, 235, 267.

1 op. cit.



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