作为道德家的休谟:一个社会历史学家的视角

N. Phillipson
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引用次数: 9

摘要

在本文中,我想讨论大卫·休谟关于道德、政治和公民身份的观点,以及哲学家和哲学化在现代公民社会中的作用——我将称之为他的公民道德理论。这是一个被哲学家们所忽视的主题,大概是因为它的哲学兴趣有限。但是,对于那些想要了解休谟作为哲学家的发展历程的历史学家来说,将他的思想置于特定的苏格兰背景中,并对他与开明的爱丁堡文学界和社交圈惊人的密切和亲切的关系有所了解,这是相当有趣的。这些都是很大的主张,我不能指望在一篇短文中充分证实它们。我的目的首先是,从历史的角度来看,休谟对公民道德的关注是他作为哲学家的核心兴趣,而不是次要兴趣,这有助于解释他放弃霍布斯和洛克那样系统的哲学思考,转而喜欢艾迪生和斯蒂尔那样有礼貌的散文写作的决定。我的第二个目的是提出休谟对公民道德的兴趣,他的新艾迪生式(或者我应该说,新西塞罗式)关于公民道德的哲学思考模式,以及他对现代政治,公民身份和哲学思考的理解的本质,与他对宗教的思考不同,是对他的苏格兰同时代人最重要的意识形态关注的回应和一致的。我猜想,这是一种共同的兴趣,有助于遏制休谟臭名昭著的宗教怀疑主义给同时代人带来的一些焦虑。没有它,他不可能成为苏格兰启蒙运动时期爱丁堡知识界的领袖之一。
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Hume as Moralist: a Social Historian's Perspective
In this paper I want to discuss David Hume's views about morals, politics and citizenship and the role of philosophers and philosophizing in modern civil society - what I shall call his theory of civic morality. This is a subject which has been neglected by philosophers, presumably because it is of limited philosophical interest. But it is of considerable interest to the historian who wants to understand Hume's development as a philosopher, to locate his thought within a specific, Scottish context and to arrive at some understanding of his surprisingly close and cordial relations with the literary and social world of enlightened Edinburgh. These are large claims and I cannot hope to substantiate them fully in a short paper. My purpose is first, to show that, historically speaking, Hume's preoccupation with civic morality was of central rather than peripheral interest to him as a philosopher and that it helps to explain his otherwise rather puzzling decision to give up philosophizing systematically in the manner of Hobbes and Locke, in favour of polite essay-writing in the manner of Addison and Steele. My second purpose is to suggest that Hume's interest in civic morality, his neo-Addisonian (or perhaps I should say, neo-Ciceronian) mode of philosophizing about it and the nature of his understanding of politics, citizenship and philosophizing in a modern age was, unlike his thought about religion, responsive to and consonant with some of the most important ideological preoccupations of his Scottish contemporaries. It was, I suspect, a shared interest which helped to contain some of the anxieties Hume's notorious religious scepticism caused his contemporaries. Without it, he could not possibly have emerged as one of the leaders of Edinburgh's intellectual life in the age of the Scottish Enlightenment.
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