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20.Hume considers human experience to be the initial principle of cognition, which he interprets as a stream of "impressions", but it is not known how it was received. Hume divides all sensory experience based on impressions into two types, depending on their strength and vividness:impressions of sensation and impressions of reflection Reason can never convince us, Hume concludes, that the existence of one object always implies the existence of another;therefore, when we move from the impression of one object to the idea of another or to the belief in this other, it is not reason that prompts us to do this, but habit or the principle of association, This philosopher can be considered: a) materialist; b)agnostic; c) empiricist; d)idealist; e)

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20.Hume considers human experience to be the initial principle
of cognition, which he interprets as a stream of "impressions",
but it is not known how it was received. Hume divides all
sensory experience based on impressions into two types,
depending on their strength and vividness:impressions of
sensation and impressions of reflection Reason can never
convince us, Hume concludes, that the existence of one object
always implies the existence of another;therefore, when we
move from the impression of one object to the idea of another
or to the belief in this other, it is not reason that prompts us to
do this, but habit or the principle of association, This
philosopher can be considered:
a) materialist; b)agnostic; c) empiricist; d)idealist; e)

20.Hume considers human experience to be the initial principle of cognition, which he interprets as a stream of "impressions", but it is not known how it was received. Hume divides all sensory experience based on impressions into two types, depending on their strength and vividness:impressions of sensation and impressions of reflection Reason can never convince us, Hume concludes, that the existence of one object always implies the existence of another;therefore, when we move from the impression of one object to the idea of another or to the belief in this other, it is not reason that prompts us to do this, but habit or the principle of association, This philosopher can be considered: a) materialist; b)agnostic; c) empiricist; d)idealist; e)

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c) empiricist<br /><br />Hume's emphasis on human experience as the initial principle of cognition and his division of sensory experience into impressions of sensation and reflection align with empiricism. Empiricism is the philosophical stance that all knowledge comes from sensory experience. Hume's skepticism about reason's ability to convince us of the existence of other objects and his reliance on habit or the principle of association further underscore his empiricist perspective.
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