Article ID: CBB397316484

A Chemistry of Human Nature: Chemical Imagery in Hume’s Treatise (2017)

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David Hume’s ‘science of man’ is frequently interpreted as an enterprise inspired in crucial respects by Newton’s Principia. However, a closer look at Hume’s central concepts and methodological commitment suggests that his Treatise of Human Nature is much more congruent with the research traditions that arose in the wake of Newton’s Opticks. In this paper I argue that the label Hume frequently attached to his project, ‘anatomy of the mind,’ is a metaphor that, considered in itself, seems to be expressing a commitment to the study of human nature in analogy with organic living nature. In this vein, Hume’s anatomy relies on conceptual and methodological resources derived from a chemical and physiological perspective on the natural cognitive and affective functioning of human beings. Since the idea of natural functioning provides various options for deriving normative considerations, Hume’s account can be seen as a middle-range theory that connects the discourses of organic nature and normative morality.

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Article Tamás Demeter (2017) Introduction – Between Physiology and Ethics: The ‘Science of Man’ as a Middle-Range Discipline. Early Science and Medicine: A Journal for the Study of Science, Technology and Medicine in the Pre-modern Period (pp. 125-129). unapi

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Authors & Contributors
Driggers, Edward Allen, Jr.
Jacqueline Anne Taylor
Garau, Rodolfo
Demeter, Tamás
Wojcik, Jan W.
Wilson, David Ball
Concepts
Human physiology
Mind and body
Chemistry
Medicine
Psychology
Digestion
Time Periods
18th century
17th century
19th century
16th century
Early modern
Enlightenment
Places
Scotland
France
England
Netherlands
British Isles
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