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Hume

Do or do not.
There is no try.
Across
All events including moral choices are necessary outcomes of previously existing causes
Feelings that underlie our ethical judgments such as empathy
Hume's division of all objects of human inquiry into two kinds (relations of ideas & matters of fact)
The philosophical belief that everything arises from natural properties and causes, and that supernatural explanations are discounted
Propositions that can be known only through experience and are subject to doubt are called "matters of ..."
Relations of these amount to propositions that are demonstratively certain such as logic
A mental representation that is less vivid than an impression
The principle by which ideas are connected in the mind including resemblance and contiguity in time or place
Hume sees this as a foundation for beliefs about causation and the external world
Doctrine that there is no external or objective truth
Belief in God who does not interfere in the universe beyond what was necessary to create it
The ability to discern aesthetic quality, which Hume believed could be cultivated and refined
The theory that reality is fundamentally mental or immaterial
Branch of philosophy that deals with the first principles of things, including concepts such as being, existence, and reality
The philosophy that emphasizes reason as the chief source of knowledge (often in contrast to Hume's empiricism)
Down
Epistemological theory that states all knowledge is derived from sensory experience
The attitude of doubting the truth of something, such as claims of knowledge
The belief that everything in the universe is part of an all-encompassing, immanent God
The belief that physical objects cannot justifiably be said to exist in themselves, but only as perceptual stimuli situated in time and space
A vivid mental image or sensation
The quality of being useful or beneficial (particularly in moral and political philosophy)
The theory that only the self is real and that the external world cannot be known to exist
Events that contradict the laws of nature (which Hume argues are always less likely than the natural occurrences they would overturn)
Hume's theory of the self that sees the self as nothing but a collection of perceptions without any underlying essence
The concern for the welfare of others, which Hume believed was a fundamental aspect of human nature
Branch of philosophy concerned with the nature and scope of knowledge
The self (or the identity of a person)
Branch of philosophy dealing with moral principles and moral theories
This conception of the universe sees it as a great machine that operates according to physical laws
A method of reasoning by which general principles are derived from specific observations
Tabula _______ .