id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 18819 Huxley, Thomas Henry Hume (English Men of Letters Series) .txt text/plain 63167 2664 62 Hume's death: but the _Inquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals_ But suppose memory to exist, and that an idea of the first impression is facts of conscious experience; and, if we follow the principle of Hume's which one idea naturally introduces another." Hume affirms that-Hume's great effort is to prove that the relation of cause and effect is In fact, in one place, Hume himself has an insight into the real nature In Hume's words, all simple ideas are copies of simple impressions. memory so good, that if he has only once observed a natural object, a different; in fact, the ideas of these impressions become generic. "All the objects of human reason and inquiry may naturally be Hume replies, certainly not by reasonings from first causes only reason out its existence on the principle that like effects have intellectual phenomena of the mind, it was natural that Hume should ./cache/18819.txt ./txt/18819.txt