Reading Hume's Dialogues: A Veneration for True Religion

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Indiana University Press, 2002 M09 13 - 296 pages

"... establishes the literary and philosophical greatness of the Dialogues in ways that even its warmest admirers have been unable to do before."
-- Terence Penelhum

In this lively reading of David Hume's Dialogues concerning Natural Religion, William Lad Sessions reveals a complex internal hermeneutic that gives new form, structure, and meaning to the work. Linking situations, character, style, and action to the philosophical concepts presented, Sessions finds meaning contained in the work itself and calls attention to the internal connections between plot, character, rhetoric, and philosophy. The result avoids the main preoccupation of previous commentaries, namely, the attempt to establish which of the main characters speaks for Hume. Concentrating on previously unexplored questions of piety and theology, Sessions asks important questions in the philosophy of religion today -- what is the nature of true religion, what is the relationship between theology and piety, and how should we actively engage with God?

 

Contents

SceneSetting
11
Pamphilus to Hermippus
30
75
108
87
147
Part 11
164
Part 12
182
Conclusion
207
LIST OF SOURCES
261
Copyright

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About the author (2002)

William Lad Sessions is Ballengee 250th Anniversary Professor of Philosophy and Chair of the Philosophy Department at Washington and Lee University. He is author of The Concept of Faith.

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