Abbreviations of Hume's Writings Used in Citations
I. Riddles, Critics, and Monsters: Text and Context
1. The Riddle
2. "Atheism" and Hume's Early Critics
3. Religious Philosophers and Speculative Atheists
4. Newtonianism, Freethought, and Hume's Scottish Context
5. The Monster of Atheism: Its Being and Attributes
II. The Form and Face of Hume's System
6. A Hobbist Plan
7. Atheism under Cover: Esoteric Communication on Hume's Title
Pages
III. The Nature of Hume's Universe
8. Blind Men before a Fire: Empiricism and the Idea of Good
9. Making Nothing of "Almighty Space"
10. The Argument a Priori and Hume's "Curious Nostrum"
11. Induction, Analogy, and a Future State: Hume's "Guide of
Life"
12. Matter, Omnipotence, and Our Idea of Necessity
13. Skepticism, Deception, and the Material World
14. Immateriality, Immortality, and the Human Soul
15. The Practical Pyrrhonist
IV. The Elements of Virtuous Atheism
16. Freedom within Necessity: Hume's "Clockwork Man"
17. Morality without Religion
V. Hume's Philosophy of Irreligion
18. The Myth of "Castration" and the Riddle's Solution
19. Was Hume an "Atheist"?
20. Hume's Lucretian Mission: Is It Self-Refuting?
Appendix: Cato's Speech at the Oracle of Ammon
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Paul Russell, Professor in Philosophy, University of British
Columbia and Lund University.
Paul Russell is Professor in Philosophy at the University of
British Columbia and Lund University. His publications include
Freedom and Moral Sentiment: Hume's Way of Naturalizing
Responsibility (Oxford University Press, 1995); The Riddle of
Hume's Treatise: Skepticism, Naturalism, and Irreligion (Oxford
University Press, 2008); and editor of The Philosophy of Free Will
(Oxford University, 2013).
"Paul Russell has given us a marvelously good book.... [He] offers
original and compelling accounts of the irreligious implications of
central arguments of the Treatise on an impressive range of
topics....it should never again be claimed that the Treatise is
largely unconcerned with questions of religion." - Don Garrett,
Philosophical Review
"This book is a triumph and a model for work in the history of
philosophy. It offers a powerful reading of the Treatise and of
Hume's intentions in writing it, while also correcting common
misunderstandings about Hume's place in early modern thought. It
deserves to be read by anyone interested in Hume or in early modern
philosophy." - Colin Heydt, Journal of the History of
Philosophy
"Paul Russell's The Riddle of Hume's Treatise is one of the most
important contributions to Hume scholarship of recent years, and
deserves to be read by all who wish to untangle the complex threads
of Hume's masterpiece. It ranks as a permanent and significant
achievement." - Peter Millican, British Journal of the History of
Philosophy
"This is a terrific tome.... Why is this book so important? Quite
simply, this is one of the best contextualist studies of Hume's A
Treatise of Human Nature ever written. To elaborate a bit, this
book provides a unique and fascinating interpretation of the
Treatise by relating its structure and content to many of the most
influential debates about religion raging at Hume's time.... one of
the best books on Hume I have ever read. " - Kevin Meeker, Mind
"This book is a triumph and a model for work in the history of
philosophy. It offers a powerful reading of the Treatise and of
Hume's intentions in writing it, while also correcting common
misunderstandings about Hume's place in early modern thought. It
deserves to be read by anyone interested in Hume or in early modern
philosophy."
--Colin Heydt, Journal of the History of Philosophy
"The Riddle of Hume's Treatise is a stimulating and provocative
piece of scholarship. The central question it poses--how to
understand all of the Treatise as part of a single project?--is
most certainly a question that still needs to be asked. And Paul
Russell's way of answering it, by means of a careful consideration
of David Hume's intellectual context, is the only way."
--Times Literary Supplement
"Paul Russell's The Riddle of Hume's Treatise is an excellent and
thought-provoking text that is a pleasure to read.... It deserves
to have an important impact not only on Hume research, but on the
narrative that drives undergraduate survey courses in the history
of early modern philosophy as well."
--Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
"Paul Russell has given us a marvelously good book.... [He] offers
original and compelling accounts of the irreligious implications of
central arguments of the Treatise on an impressive range of
topics....it should never again be claimed that the Treatise is
largely unconcerned with questions of religion."
--Don Garrett, Philosophical Review
"[T]his work of great historical erudition and philosophical
penetration...is essential reading that will deepen forever our
understanding of Hume's philosophical masterpiece."
--Don Garrett, Professor of Philosophy, New York University
"Russell's...book presents a powerful, comprehensive, and elegantly
written case for putting 'irreligion' alongside -- and even above -
'scepticism' and 'naturalism' as a pervasive theme not only of
Hume's later work, but also of his Treatise."
--Peter Millican, Faculty of Philosophy, Hertford College,
Oxford
"Paul Russell's lucid and finely-researched book...will enable all
of us to read Hume's primary work with fresh understanding, and is
a major addition to the scholarly literature."
--Terence Penelhum, Professor Emeritus of Religious Studies,
University of Calgary
"Persuasively argues that irreligion is the main agenda of Hume's
Treatise ."
--Annette Baier, author of Death and Character: Further Reflections
on Hume
"A bold and novel approachthe study as a whole has an exceptional
merit."--J. D. McNabb, Eighteenth Century Fiction
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