amorphous_constellation
Well-Known Member
"That cause, which excites the passion, is related to the object, which nature has attributed to the passion; the sensation, which the cause separately produces, is related to the sensation of the passion: from this double relation of ideas and impressions the passion is derived. The one idea is easily converted into its correlative ; and the one impression into that which resembles and corresponds to it: with how much greater facility must this transition be made, where these movements mutually assist each other, and the mind receives a double impulse from the relations both of its impressions and ideas!"
Hume, David. A Treatise of Human Nature by David Hume in Two Volumes. J. M. Dent & sons, E. P. Dutton & co, 1911, p. 13.
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The object is the 'verb' of the passion, i.e. the pain, pleasure, or other state which it induces, as an 'acting state' on the self. The cause refers to a 'non-abstract practical piece of matter.' Say for example, a porcupine quill.
So from the porcupine quill, imagine two abstract lines going out from it. One line represents the mere sensation of pain, and the other line represents the 'passion combination' of the sensation of pain with the abstract notion of pain. So the former line is an 'impression,' and the latter is more like an 'idea'
So all that hume is saying, is that this 'double relation' is supposedly what decreases the latency of the 'impulse' that the mind receives. But also I suppose, that the power of the non-abstract qualities of an impression is really what would do that job. Supposedly.
Hume, David. A Treatise of Human Nature by David Hume in Two Volumes. J. M. Dent & sons, E. P. Dutton & co, 1911, p. 13.
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The object is the 'verb' of the passion, i.e. the pain, pleasure, or other state which it induces, as an 'acting state' on the self. The cause refers to a 'non-abstract practical piece of matter.' Say for example, a porcupine quill.
So from the porcupine quill, imagine two abstract lines going out from it. One line represents the mere sensation of pain, and the other line represents the 'passion combination' of the sensation of pain with the abstract notion of pain. So the former line is an 'impression,' and the latter is more like an 'idea'
So all that hume is saying, is that this 'double relation' is supposedly what decreases the latency of the 'impulse' that the mind receives. But also I suppose, that the power of the non-abstract qualities of an impression is really what would do that job. Supposedly.
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