PHIL 111 Study Guide - Final Guide: Transpose

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29 Oct 2014
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Someone who argues that knowledge comes from experience. Without impressions, there can not be these matters of fact and relation of ideas. Judgments grounded upon experience and limited and uncertain in their application of specific cases. Beliefs that claim to report the nature of existing things. Studying science/ beliefs arise from sentiment or feeling rather than reason. Beliefs grounded wholly on associations formed within the mind. Ideas that can be broken down into smaller parts. Direct vivid and forceful products of immediate experience. Multiplication is learned by habit of repetition producing a conviction independent of reason. Nothing more than a measure of strength of conviction produced in us by our experience of regularity. 2 things that differ only in their degree of conviction which their other objects are anticipated. Produces the habit of expecting the effect when we experience the cause. Since we have no experience of universe formation, inferences to its cause are unwarranted.