“The Paradoxical Principle and Salutary Practice”: Hume on Toleration

Hume Studies 31 (1):145-164 (2005)
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Abstract

David Hume is an ardent supporter of the practice of religions toleration. For Hume, toleration forms part of the background that makes progress in philosophy possible, and it accounts for the superiority of philosophical thought in England in the eighteenth century. As he puts it in the introduction to the Treatise: “the improvements in reason and philosophy can only be owing to a land of toleration and of liberty”. Similarly, the narrator of part 11 of the First Enquiry comments

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Richard Dees
University of Rochester