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B1 Intermedio Inglés 11:06 Educational

PHILOSOPHY - David Hume

The School of Life · 2,162,393 vistas · Añadido hace 3 días

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B1

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Subtítulos (167 segmentos)

00:07

The 18th century writer, David Hume, is one of the world's great philosophical voices

00:12

because he hit upon a key fact about human nature-

00:15

that we are more influenced by our feelings than by reason.

00:19

This is, at one level, possibly a great insult to our self image,

00:23

but Hume thought that if we could learn to deal well with this surprising fact,

00:28

we could be both individually and collectively a great deal calmer and happier than if we denied it.

00:35

Hume was born in Edinburgh in 1711, to a family that was long established but far from rich.

00:41

He was the second son and it was clear early on that he would need to find a job eventually,

00:45

but nothing seemed to suit him.

00:47

He tried law, the vocation of his father and his older brother,

00:50

but soon decided that it was: "a laborious profession, requiring the drudgery of a whole life."

00:56

He was considered for academic posts at the University of Edinburgh and the University of Glasgow,

01:01

but he didn't land either job.

01:04

So, he set out to become a public intellectual, someone who would make his money selling books to the general public.

01:11

It was pretty hard-going.

01:12

His first book, 'A Treatise of Human Nature', for which he had the highest hopes, met with a dismal reception.

01:19

"Never literary attempt was more unfortunate than my Treatise", he wrote.

01:23

"It fell dead-born from the press, without reaching such distinction as to even excite a murmur along the zealots."

01:31

But Hume kept at it, realising that the blame largely lay with the way that he had expressed his ideas.

01:37

And doggedly training himself to write in a more accessible and popular manner,

01:42

eventually, he did find an audience.

01:44

his later works: popular history books and collections of elegant essays were best-sellers of the day.

01:50

As he would say, not without some pride:

01:53

"The money given me by booksellers much exceeded anything formerly known in England;

01:58

I was to become not only independent but opulent."

02:02

Humes philosophy is built around a single powerful observation:

02:05

that the key thing we need to get right in life is feeling rather than rationality.

02:10

It sounds like an odd conclusion.

02:12

Normally we assume that what we need to do is train our minds to be as rational as possible,

02:17

to be devoted to evidence and logical reasoning and committed to preventing our feelings from getting in the way.

02:23

But Hume insisted that whatever we may aim for - reason is the slave of passion.

02:28

We are more motivated by our feelings than by any of the comparatively feeble results of analysis and logic.

02:35

Few of our leading convictions had driven by rational investigations of the facts.

02:40

We decide whether someone is admirable, what to do with our spare time,

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