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Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
The only difference that Hume sees between impressions and ideas is their degree of force and liveliness, or force and vivacity. Impressions are more forceful and lively than ideas: for example, actually feeling a pain is more forceful and lively than merely thinking about a pain.
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Feb 26, 2001 ˇ Impressions include sensations as well as desires, passions, and emotions. Ideas are “the faint images of these in thinking and reasoning” (T ...
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Apr 25, 2016 ˇ Hume was an empiricist, he believed that all ideas can be reduced to sense impressions. Even if you imagine a creature that does not exist.
In this section I will give a brief introduction to Hume's theory of ideas, and explain how it relates to the phenomenological concepts I will introduce later.
May 14, 2019 ˇ Hume was an empiricist, he believed that all ideas can be reduced to sense impressions. Even if you imagine a creature that does not exist, your ...
Jun 8, 2009 ˇ This paper aims to illustrate, in a non-technical, one of the essential notional divisions in the philosophy of David Hume: Impressions and Ideas.
'Feeling' here should be understood broadly, and Hume, again following Locke, divides impressions into those of 'sensation' and those of 'reflection'.
1.1). 5 For example, “Impressions may be divided into two kinds, those of SENSATION and those of REFLECTION.” (T 1.1.