ABSTRACT

David Hume’s Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion is a philosophical and literary classic of the highest order. It is also an extremely relevant work because of its engagement with issues as alive today as in Hume’s time: the Design Argument for a deity, the Problem of Evil, the dangers of superstition and fanaticism, the psychological roots and social consequences of religion.

In this outstanding and unorthodox collection, an international team of scholars engage with Hume’s classic work. The chapters include state-of-the-art contributions on the central interpretive questions posed by the Dialogues as well as major contributions relating the work to contemporary issues in Philosophy of Religion, Philosophy of Science, Moral Psychology, and Social Philosophy. Additional contributions tackle the historical and philosophical background of the Dialogues, relating it to Hume’s own systematic philosophy, to the work of other key seventeenth and eighteenth-century figures – Locke, Clarke, Bayle, Cudworth, Malebranche, Spinoza, Lord Bolingbroke, and Voltaire, among others – to early modern neo-Epicureanism in the life sciences, and, notably, to what Darwin missed by thinking too much like William Paley and not enough like Hume’s Philo.

Overall, this volume provides fresh and even groundbreaking perspectives on Hume’s Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion. It is essential reading for students and scholars of Hume, the History of Modern Philosophy, Philosophy of Religion and the History and Philosophy of Science.

chapter |26 pages

Introduction

part 1|17 pages

Two Overtures to Raillery

chapter 1|6 pages

Hume's Dialogues

Cautious, Artful, and Funny

chapter 2|9 pages

Recipes or, Philosophy for Fun

part 2|71 pages

Theistic “Proofs”

chapter 3|24 pages

A Bayesian Double Negative

A Critique of Hume's Treatment of the Design Argument in the Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion and a Critique of the Design Argument Itself

part 3|81 pages

Matters of Interpretation

chapter 6|20 pages

Hume's “Artful” Masterpiece

The Dialogues and the Concealed Case for Atheism

chapter 7|16 pages

Not Hoist with His Own Petard

Hume's Dance with Skepticism in Dialogues, Part I

chapter 8|15 pages

155Demea's Departure Revisited

chapter 9|28 pages

Hume's Palimpsest

The Four Endings of the Dialogues

part 4|51 pages

Religion, Passion, and the Limits of Reason

part 5|167 pages

Epicurus and Darwin, Strato and Spinoza

chapter 14|30 pages

277Philo's Trojan Horse

The World Soul Hypothesis and the Necessitarianism Inside

chapter 15|111 pages

307Philo, Strato and Spinoza