James Jurin Awakens Hume from His Dogmatic Slumber. With a Short Tract on Visual Acuity

Hume Studies 32 (1):141-166 (2006)
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Abstract

After a discourse about the literature on visual acuity before Hume, I discuss how the "size" of visual objects is defined and determined. I shall then present circumstantial, but commanding, evidence for the influence of James Jurin's Essay upon Distinct and Indistinct Vision on Hume's thought. This work contains well-supported findings incompatible with claims made in T 1.2, "Of the ideas of space and time," and elsewhere. Specifically, the prominent principle of the Treatise, "[w]hat consists of parts is distinguishable into them, and what is distinguishable is separable" (T 1.2.1.3; SBN 27) is shown to be false. A powerful principle, it is a premise to the most important arguments of the Treatise, but is shunned in the Enquiry and later writings because, I believe, Hume had read Jurin.

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References found in this work

Advertisement.[author unknown] - 1998 - Symposium 2 (2):258-258.
Advertisement.[author unknown] - 1999 - Symposium 3 (2):304-304.
Advertisement.[author unknown] - 2007 - Symposium 11 (1):224-224.
Bayle and the case for actual parts.Thomas Anand Holden - 2004 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 42 (2):145-164.

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