Regularities all the way down: Thomas Brown's Philosophy of Causation∗
Abstract
Thomas Brown was one of the tail-enders of the Scottish Enlightenment. He shared with Dugald Stewart the chair of Moral Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh from 1810 until his premature death in 1820. He is sometimes classed with the Scottish common-sense philosophers and, to some extent at least, his basic philosophical principles were akin to those of the common-sense philosophy. He did, for instance, forfeit the issue of the justification of some of our most basic beliefs and rested them, instead, on their being intuitively irresistible; in particular, he thought that some of our most basic beliefs could be seen as permanent principles of human nature—a claim made popular by Thomas Reid. Based on his theory of the workings of the human mind—which was developed in a course of lectures on the philosophy of mind presented at the University of Edinburgh and appeared posthumously as a book titled Lectures on the Philosophy of the Human Mind—some philosophers and psychologists have characterised him as an ‘associationist’.1 Brown ’s main contribution to the philosophy of causation was his book Inquiry into the Relation of Cause and Effect, published in 1818. This is, actually, the third edition of his little book titled Observations on.