DAVID HUME
Thesis Statement: God is beyond human experience, thus, He doesn’t exist.
“Does a man of sense run after every silly tale of hobgoblins or fairies, and canvass particularly the evidence? I never knew anyone, that examined and deliberated about nonsense who did not believe it before the end of his enquiries.” - David Hume, Letters
Introduction of His life (http://www.biography.com/articles/David-Hume-9346827)
DAVID HUME. (born May 7 [April 26, Old Style], 1711, Edinburgh, Scot.—died Aug. 25, 1776, Edinburgh) Scottish philosopher, historian, economist, and essayist, known especially for his philosophical empiricism and skepticism.
Hume conceived of philosophy as the inductive, experimental science of human nature. Taking the scientific method of the English physicist Sir Isaac Newton as his model and building on the epistemology of the English philosopher John Locke, Hume tried to describe how the mind works in acquiring what is called knowledge. He concluded that no theory of reality is possible; there can be no knowledge of anything beyond experience. Despite the enduring impact of his theory of knowledge, Hume seems to have considered himself chiefly as a moralist.
Early life and works
Hume was the younger son of Joseph Hume, the modestly circumstanced laird, or lord, of Ninewells, a small estate adjoining the village of Chirnside, about nine miles distant from Berwick-upon-Tweed on the Scottish side of the border. David's mother, Catherine, a daughter of Sir David Falconer, president of the Scottish court of session, was in Edinburgh when he was born. In his third year his father died. He entered Edinburgh University when he was about 12 years old and left it at 14 or 15, as was then usual. Pressed a little later to study law (in the family tradition on both sides), he found it distasteful and instead read voraciously in the wider sphere of letters. Because of the intensity and excitement of his intellectual discovery, he had a nervous breakdown in 1729, from which it took him a few years to recover.
In 1734, after trying his hand in a merchant's office in Bristol, he came to the turning point of his life and retired to France for three years. Most of this time he spent at La Flèche on the Loire, in the old Anjou, studying and writing A Treatise of Human Nature. The Treatise was Hume's attempt to formulate a full-fledged philosophical system. It is divided into three books: book I, on understanding, aims at explaining man's process of knowing, describing in order the origin of ideas, the ideas of space and time, causality, and the testimony of the senses; book II, on the “passions” of man, gives an elaborate psychological machinery to explain the affective, or emotional, order in man and assigns a subordinate role to reason in this mechanism; book III, on morals, describes moral goodness in terms of “feelings” of approval or disapproval that a person has when he considers human behaviour in the light of the agreeable or disagreeable consequences either to himself or to others. Although the Treatise is Hume's most thorough exposition of his thought, at the end of his life he vehemently repudiated it as juvenile, avowing that only his later writings presented his considered views. The Treatise is not well constructed, in parts oversubtle, confusing because of ambiguity in important terms (especially “reason”), and marred by willful extravagance of statement and rather theatrical personal avowals. For these reasons his mature condemnation of it was perhaps not entirely misplaced. Book I, nevertheless, has been more read in academic circles than any other of his writings.
Thesis Points: God is beyond human experience, thus, He does not exist.
“Why bother?” asked by the atheists…or skeptics in that case.
The following points are critiques of David Hume pertaining to the Argument on DESIGN on which this argument says that all the order in the world has the divine origin and refer to a being who is God.
1. The argument begins with the observance of the beautiful order in nature. This order makes man to think upon unthinking materials which is responsible for the order we see in nature. For unthinkable materials do not contain the principle of orderliness within themselves. So, there must be an orderer who is responsible for the order in the nature. But this inference is uncertain as Hume says, because the subject lies entirely beyond the reach of human experience.
2. The whole Argument on Design lies on the causal proposition on the causes of order in the universe. The causal propositions lie on analogical basis of human intelligence. We cannot apply the analogy of the world into the analogy of the machine. If God then is what we tend to analogize, we try to bring down the highest possibilities of God into our limited comprehension and thus, we cannot reach and comprehend his being into our experience.
3. The order of the universe is simply an empirical fact and that we cannot infer from it the existence of God. Universe and God is two different entities. Seeing and observing the fact of the universe as it is, for it is simply the fact that we can see it. But on God, empirical statements cannot be determined his existence for it is beyond what we observe, see, or on every function of our senses and thus, we cannot know God.
4. Our ideas reach no further than our experiences. Since, we have no experience of the divine. Therefore, we cannot have the idea of the divine.
5. Hume accurately described the Argument from Design as "useless" because in and of itself it can never "establish any new principles of conduct and behavior." The Argument from Design only shows that there is an intelligent design in the universe; it tells us nothing about whether the entity cares about human beings, communicates with them, or has moral scruples. Of itself, intelligent design does not validate any theology beyond deism. (David Hume on the Argument from Design/ google.search)
6. ‘Christian God’ as Hume says could not be proven to be existed looking on human conditions where evil is present. If God is intelligible and good, why then, evil is present in the world? "Is he willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then is he impotent (without power). Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent (desires evil). Is he both able and willing: whence then is evil?"
7. The Argument on Design does not explain pain, suffering, and natural disaster. (David Hume on Wikipedia.html)
Conclusion
The human mind is definitely limited within the scope of his experience. Whatever he experienced, he will try to accept it as a being that exists, and in line with this thought, if he not experienced God, he will eventually not accept the existence of God. To experience, as Hume states that, is to have a sense experience that is observable on our senses and can be comprehended by the human reason alone. And if the human mind cannot comprehend it at all through empirical researches then it will reject it and accept it as incomprehensible.
There is a great leap of believing in God, atheists or skeptics will say. It seems that there is a missing link in inferring that God exists. There is a big short cut, by just observing that there is an order and beauty in the world, we leap to the conclusion that there must be an orderer for these things and this must be God? For Hume, it is not necessarily be God as the end of all the propositions. If we argue along the line that the cause of the order and beauty in the world is God, then probably there is a cause on which God causes the order and beauty in the world. A cause of God who is the cause of order and so on and so forth, as the mind comprehend at causality of things. There is this Ad finitum causes of causes.
Why bother at all discussing on God who is the all-knowing, omnipotent and all good but looking on the present reality where chaos and evil is present? And, I answer as my personal contribution to this skeptical argument, why then reasoning out God on the basis of our life in this world, why reasoning out life on the basis of God instead?
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“God himself has been mute on giving an authoritative answer to this unanswerable question since it was first asked and although there have been many who have gladly tried to answer it for him, no one has yet to hear the final word on the subject.”
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Theologian who died in 1945 in the Flossenburg Concentration Camp
References
www.suite101.com/does_god_exist/western-philosophy
www.wpmued.org/hume
Standford Encyclopedia of Philosphy.html
Stumpf, Samuel Enoch and James Fieser. Socrates to Sarte, A History of Philosophy, Seventh Edition.
USA: The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2005.

