Assignment 2 Semester 1 2025
Unique Number:
Due Date: 7 April 2025
HUME, LOGICAL POSITIVISM, AND THE REJECTION OF METAPHYSICS: A
CRITICAL PHILOSOPHICAL ANALYSIS
1. INTRODUCTION
David Hume, an influential figure of the Scottish Enlightenment, famously declared that any
form of metaphysics hinting at entities or realities beyond sensory experience ought to “be
cast into the flames” (Hume, 2000:12). Although Hume wrote in the eighteenth century, his
arguments foreshadowed the more systematic stance taken by the Logical Positivists in
the early twentieth century. Both Hume and the Logical Positivists contended that
statements which cannot be grounded in sense experience or verifiable reasoning are
effectively meaningless. This essay explores Hume‟s criticisms of metaphysics, explains
how the Logical Positivists expanded upon these criticisms, and highlights both the
strengths and weaknesses of their arguments. By applying a dialectical method—
presenting Hume‟s and the Positivists‟ “thesis,” examining potential “antithesis,” and
seeking a concluding “synthesis”—the discussion aims to illustrate why these philosophers
viewed metaphysics with such suspicion, as well as acknowledge where their views might
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HUME, LOGICAL POSITIVISM, AND THE REJECTION OF METAPHYSICS: A
CRITICAL PHILOSOPHICAL ANALYSIS
1. INTRODUCTION
David Hume, an influential figure of the Scottish Enlightenment, famously declared
that any form of metaphysics hinting at entities or realities beyond sensory
experience ought to “be cast into the flames” (Hume, 2000:12). Although Hume
wrote in the eighteenth century, his arguments foreshadowed the more systematic
stance taken by the Logical Positivists in the early twentieth century. Both Hume and
the Logical Positivists contended that statements which cannot be grounded in
sense experience or verifiable reasoning are effectively meaningless. This essay
explores Hume‟s criticisms of metaphysics, explains how the Logical Positivists
expanded upon these criticisms, and highlights both the strengths and weaknesses
of their arguments. By applying a dialectical method—presenting Hume‟s and the
Positivists‟ “thesis,” examining potential “antithesis,” and seeking a concluding
“synthesis”—the discussion aims to illustrate why these philosophers viewed
metaphysics with such suspicion, as well as acknowledge where their views might
be challenged.
2. HUME’S CRITIQUE OF METAPHYSICS
2.1. Emphasis on Sensory Experience
Hume (2000) grounded his philosophical investigations in the empirical method,
insisting that all genuine knowledge about the world must stem from sensory
impressions. According to Hume, ideas that cannot be reduced to original sense
impressions or combinations of them lack meaningful content (Hume, 2000:10).
Hence, for Hume, statements about entities beyond possible experience—such as
the essence of the soul, transcendent realities, or the ultimate nature of causality—
were suspect. They could not be traced back to any direct observation or verifiable
data (Hume, 2000:12).
In An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, Hume underscores the limits of
human reason, arguing that we can only meaningfully discuss what the senses can
confirm or what can be deduced by relations of ideas (such as mathematics and