ABSTRACT

In the first ever book-length treatment of David Hume’s philosophy of action, Constantine Sandis brings together seemingly disparate aspects of Hume’s work to present an understanding of human action that is much richer than previously assumed. Sandis showcases Hume’s interconnected views on action and its causes by situating them within a wider vision of our human understanding of personal identity, causation, freedom, historical explanation, and morality. In so doing, he also relates key aspects of the emerging picture to contemporary concerns within the philosophy of action and moral psychology, including debates between Humeans and anti-Humeans about both 'motivating' and 'normative' reasons.

Character and Causation takes the form of a series of essays which collectively argue that Hume’s overall project proceeds by way of a soft conceptual revisionism that emerges from his Copy Principle. This involves re-calibrating our philosophical ideas of all that agency involves to fit a scheme that more readily matches the range of impressions that human beings actually have. On such a reading, once we rid ourselves of a certain kind of metaphysical ambition we are left with a perfectly adequate account of how it is that people can act in character, freely, and for good reasons. The resulting picture is one that both unifies Hume's practical and theoretical philosophy and radically transforms contemporary philosophy of action for the better.

chapter |8 pages

Prologue

1People and Their Actions

chapter 1|20 pages

The Soft Science

chapter 2|15 pages

Causation

The Very Idea

chapter 3|14 pages

Necessity, Power, and Freedom

chapter 4|19 pages

People Across Time

chapter 5|17 pages

The Self as Agent

chapter 6|13 pages

Hume’s Actual Theory of Motivation

chapter 7|13 pages

Past Actions

chapter |4 pages

Epilogue

Hume and Contemporary Philosophy of Action