Skip to main content
×
×
Home
  • Print publication year: 1994
  • Online publication date: October 2009

4 - Hume on the miraculous

Summary

The chapter entitled ‘Of Miracles’ is Section x of Hume's First Enquiry, but before he presents this specific treatment of belief in miracles, he has already asserted our fundamental reliance on experience as the proper guide to what should be believed. For instance, there is his discussion of human action and what we believe when historians treat of it.

Should a traveller, returning from a far country, bring us an account of men, wholly different from any with whom we were ever acquainted; men, who were entirely divested of avarice, ambition, or revenge; who knew no pleasure but friendship, generosity, and public spirit; we should immediately, from these circumstances, detect the falsehood, and prove him a liar, with the same certainty as if he had stuffed his narration with stories of centaurs and dragons, miracles and prodigies. And if we would explode any forgery in history, we cannot make use of a more convincing argument, than to prove, that the actions ascribed to any person are directly contrary to the course of nature, and that no human motives, in such circumstances, could ever induce him to such a conduct. The veracity of Quintus Curtius is as much to be suspected, when he describes the supernatural courage of Alexander, by which he was hurried on singly to attack multitudes, as when he describes his supernatural force and activity, by which he was able to resist them. So readily and universally do we acknowledge a uniformity in human motives and actions as well as in the operations of body.

Recommend this book

Email your librarian or administrator to recommend adding this book to your organisation's collection.

Reported Miracles
  • Online ISBN: 9780511554681
  • Book DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511554681
Please enter your name
Please enter a valid email address
Who would you like to send this to *
×