Literary Criticism (1400-1800)

Hume, David | Pheroze Wadia (essay date 1992)

Pheroze Wadia (essay date 1992)

SOURCE: “Philosophy as Literature: The Case of Hume's Dialogues,” in Compendious Conversations: The Method of Dialogue in the Early Enlightenment, edited by Kevin L. Cope, Peter Lang, 1992, pp. 34-53.

[In this essay, Wadia attempts to correct traditional criticisms of the Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion by viewing its theological doctrines against the backdrop of its dialogue form.]

In a well-known passage toward the close of Book I of his A Treatise of Human Nature,1 David Hume tells us how, when he reflects on “the condition of the learned world, which lies under such a deplorable ignorance” of the fundamental principles of philosophical learning, “I feel an ambition to arise in me of contributing to the instruction of mankind, and the acquiring a name by my inventions and discoveries.”2 The cultivation of a proper style in which to communicate...

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