preview

Motivating Passions In The Book Of Treatise By David Hume

Decent Essays

According to Hume, deliberate actions are the direct products of passion. He believes that no other mental state on its own could have intentional action except by creating a passion. In the book of Treatise he explains the difference between impressions of sensation and impressions of reflection. He claims that motivating passions are formed by specific causes in the mind.
Impressions first take hold of our senses, and cause us to perceive cold or hot, pleasure or pain, thirst or hunger, ect. When these impressions occur the brain makes copies that remain after the impression comes to an end. Meaning long after that moment happens the brain stores that moment as good or bad. Therefore this is where we get ideas. The idea of pleasure or pain when returned to the soul produces new impressions of desire and aversion, hope and fear, they are known as impressions of reflection. Therefore ideas of pleasure or pain are caused by motivating passions. Not just any ideas give are a rise of motivating passions only the ideas of those we believe exist or will exist. …show more content…

When we knowingly give rise to an action is the impression called will. Hume suggests that will is not a spate cause of action. Instincts and direct passions caused by action he has identified. Hume claims that he proved that reason alone “can never oppose passion in the direction of the will” and “reason alone can never be a motive to any action of the will”. Meaning reason has no cause for action. Reason provides information making a path for the will. Hume believes that reason alone can’t move us to action, but that the desire to act comes from passion. Hume mentions in the Treatise that reason needs knowledge in order to achieve passions’ goals and has no impulse of its

Get Access