Norton1981 PDF
Norton1981 PDF
It came to pass that the earth was without form, and void, and darknesscovered
the face of the earth. And the creator saw that the darkness was evil, and he spoke
out in the darkness, saying Let there be light and there was light, and he called
the light Renaissance. But still the creator was not pleased, for there remained
darkness, and hence he took from Renaissance a rib. with which to fashion greater
tight. But the strain of his power broke the rib, and there did grow up two false
lights, one Bacon, whose name meaneth Father of the British Empiricists, and
one Descartes, whose name meaneth Father of the Continental Rationalists.
And because the creator saw that these were false lights, and that they should
war with one another, he set them apart and divided them by a great gulf, and said
unto them, Thus shall you labor apart until there shall grow up out of the East,
yea, even out of Koenigsberg, a great philosopher who shall be neither of you and
yet like unto both of you, and he shall bring true light and unite you.
And thus it was that Bacon begat Hobbes, and Hobbes begat Locke, and Locke
begat Berkeley, and Berkeley begat Hume. And thus it was that Descartes begat
Spinoza, and Spinoza begat Leibniz, and Leibniz begat Wolff. And then it was
that there arose the great sage of Koenigsberg, the great ImmanueI, Immanuel
Kant, who, though neither empiricist nor rationalist, was like unto both. He it was
who combined the eye of the scientist with the mind of the mathematician. And
this too the creator saw, and he saw that it was good, and he sent goodly men and
scholars true to tell the story wherever men should henceforth gather to speak of
sages past.
Ideas, namely, the proposition that all knowledge is obtained through the
medium of ideas. According to Locke, it could no longer be supposed that
there were innate ideas, and without innate ideas, there was not only no built-in
knowledge of reality, but also, it seemed, no possibility of gaining such know-
ledge. To know nominal essences was the best that man could hope for.
Berkeley, then, according to Reid, uncovered the fact that Lockes theory
could produce no proof that a material world existed, though the good Bishops
theistic commitments prevented him from seeing a second problem inherent in
the empiricist theory, namely, that there could be no proof of spiritual sub-
stances either. Discovery of this final deficiency was left to flume. Indeed
according to Reid, Humes great service to philosophy lay in the fact that he
took up where Berkeley had left off, and quite unwittingly, exposed and
espoused an absurd and dangerous scepticism inherent in the claim that man
perceives and knows by means of ideas.
A hundred years later, when German philosophy had all but conquered the
intellectual world, T.H. Green set about showing both the legitimacy and
inevitability of this victory by editing the first (and only) complete edition of
Humes philosophical works. The cunning reason for this otherwise puzzling
step was simple: Green wanted to show that Hume had in fact brought a certain
mode of philosophy - empiricism - to its ultimate and fully negative con-
clusion, and thus to show that such remaining empiricists as John Stuart Mifl
were mere anachronism9. In this way Green added important verses to Reids
refrain, while at the same time dropping any suggestion that Locke, Berkeley,
or Hume had ever read or heard of any non-British philosopher. Locke, says
Green, had pretty well gathered up the results of the empirical phiIosophy
of his predecessors, Bacon and Hobbes, and so it is necessary to show only
Humes direct filiation with Locke. The filiation is a simple one: Hume
adopted Lockes (and to a lesser extent, Berkeleys) premises. From Locke, for
example, he took the claims that the mind is merely a blank and passive
observer and that the mind is to be understood only by means of a history of
consciousness, as a series of events, or successive states observed in the
individua1 himself. In addition, Humes idea of substance is said to be simply
Lockes shed of the notion that there is a real something which is the source
and support of the collection of ideas which we have; furthermore, in his
speculation on morals, no less than on knowledge, Hume follows precisely the
lines laid down by LockeD. At the same time, Hume is said to have made a full
acceptance of Berkeleys doctrine of sense and to have written with
Berkeley steadily before his mind.
Green does not claim that these borrowings Lessen Humes contribution to
philosophy. On the contrary, having adopted these premises, Hume is said to
have cleared them, as only a disinterested philosopher could, of any incon-
sistencies due to popular belief, and to have carried them to their full and fully
sceptical conclusions. Empiricism, thus taken to its logical conclusion is found
to be embarrassingly untenable, but not because of any deficiencies in Humes
statement of the case. Hume spoke, says Green, engaging rather obviously in
myth-making, like every true philosopher . . . as the mouthpiece of a certain
system of thought determined for him by the stage at which he found the
dialectic movement that constitutes the progress of philosophy, and he did
The Myth of British Empiricism 333
not directed toward Descartes at all, but toward a group of English divines who
did hold the kind of innate idea theory which Locke attacks. And though one
may not wish to go so far as Reid and his fellow Scats, and suggest that Locke
was in fact merely another Cartesian, there is no gain saying the claim that
Lockes Way of Ideas is a modification of a theory central to Descartes.
However, to come to the main contention, both Berkeley and Hume appear
to be indebted to Malebranche, whose writings were readily available in
English at the beginning of the eighteenth century. Curiously. atthough
Berkeleys own contempora~es often saw him as a disciple of ~alebranche.
the relationship between the two philosophers - who seem to have met and
discussed philosophical issues - was only studied in detail some 40 years ago
when A.A. Lute prepared his volume, Berkeley and Malebranche. Given our
present historical biases, it may seem strange to think that a philosopher like
Malebranche, who posits a domain of pure mathematical essences, could have
had such an appeal for Berkeley. But the evidence seems ove~helming,
especially in view of Berkeieys notes in his (since 1944) properly reconstructed
Philosophicai Commentaries14, and when more is known of Malebranche, the
influence is not strange at all. He was an early writer on scientific optics; he was
also, as was Descartes, an opponent of the abstractionist account of concept
formation; and he seems to have first suggested the distinction between
feelings, which are dependent on the perceiver, and Ideas, which have indepen-
dent existence. Berkeleys first major work was, of course, the 77reor-y of
Vision (1709); in all his writings, but especially in the introduction to the
Principles (1710), he attacks the view that we can form abstract ideas by some
sort of generalising process; and though he is sometimes ambiguous about the
status of ideas, seeming to suggest that they are both dependent entities and
proper objects of knowledge, there is in Berkeley at least a partial analogue to
the feeiings and Zdeas of Malebranche, namely, the distinction between mind-
dependent entities and the real knowledge which is obtained via notions.
In more general terms, Malebranche was a Cartesian, but instead of follow-
ing Descartes, who grounded the objectivity of our knowledge in innate ideas.
Malebranche argued for an eternal domain of Ideas. Rather than having to
multiply the sets of innate ideas by the number of persons, Malebranche
posited a single set, common to all. Hence, he spoke of seeing all things in
God. What one actually sees in God is the essence of the material world - a
narrowly mathematical domain. Thus, even more sharply than Descartes,
Matebranche separated the essence of things from their existence, and argued
that while we can know various essential truths about matter (e.g. geometrical
truths) we must appeal to Holy Scripture to establish that there is in fact a
material world. Hence, we can properly be said to know the essence of the
material world, but not its existence. Conversely, we can know that we are
existent thinkers, but we have no access to the essence of mind. In general
terms again, Berkeley mirrors Malebranche. There can be no proof of the
existence of the muter&l world for we are acquainted only with ideas and our
own minds; and ideas persist even though humanly unperceived, because they
are in the mind of God. In short, both philosophers want to retain a common
sense perspective on the existence of objects - to say that objects are continu-
ous and real - but neither thinks that such a perspective is even marginally
The Myth of British Empiricism 337
. it is not at all clear that Berkeley was in fact interpreting or attacking Locke on
substance or on the latters view of primary and secondary qualities. . . . Berkeley
does not. either in the Principles or in the Three Dialogues, refer to Locke in
connection with substance. reality or material substance. Nor does he quote from,
advert to. paraphrase. mention or even - I believe - allude to Lockes Essay
when discussing these subjects in his two famous workslY.
338 David Fate Norton
This will be a propitious point at which to turn to David Hume, the third man
in the Empiricist trilogy, for there is also serious doubt about Humes debt to
Berkeley. In fact, some 15 years ago it was asked if there was any reason to
think that Hume had, contra the standard account, so much as read Berkeley.
At that time there was no decisive external evidence in favour of the claim that
he had, and the internal evidence of a direct influence is scanty indeed: Hume
mentions Berkeley fewer than a half-dozen times in all his published works; a
Berkelian doctrine is used to establish Humes marginally intelligible views on
space and time, and the one Berkelian position which Hume does repeat, that
regarding abstract ideas, is couched not in Berkeleys terms, but in those of
Chambers Cyclopedia *O.Subsequently, the publication of one of Humes early
letters has made it seem likely that he had in fact read Berkeley, but the letter
itself is highly significant in the present context. Writing to his friend Michael
Ramsay in August, 1737, when the manuscript of the Treatise Concerning
Human Nature was only just completed, Hume says:
I shall submit all my Performances to your Examination, & to make you enter
them the more easily, I desire you, if you have Leizure, to read once over le
Recherche de la Verite of Pere Malebranche, the Principles of Human Knowledge
by Dr. Berkeley, some of the more metaphysical Articles of Bailes Dictionary;
such as those . . on Zeno & Spinoza. Des-Cartes Meditations would also be
useful . . . & make you easily comprehend the metaphysical Parts of my
Reasoning. . .21
In other words, Hume did read Berkeley, but, in addition -and this comes as
no surprise to those who understand Humes analysis of causation, his ideas on
space and time, and his objections to the primary-secondary quality distinction
- he had also read and been influenced by both Malebranche and Bayle, and
perhaps even by Descartes.
Nor are Malebranche and Bayle the only non-empiricists who seem to have
influenced Hume. Shaftesbury, who was himself indebted to the Cambridge
Platonists, and Hutcheson, who explicitly set out to defend Shaftesbury. are
two others, and the extent of Humes debt to these philosophers, especially to
Hutcheson, is beginning to be seen)). Norman Kemp Smith has, in fact, offered a
revolutionary re-assessment of Hume, claiming that he is to be understood as
utihsing Hutchesons moral sense realism as the basis of a metaphysical realism
of a common sense sort - or, in other words, that Hume explicitly set out to
show that our beliefs in necessary connection, substance and personal identity
are natural, necessary, and quite beyond doubt, and that he intended to show
that the very kind of scepticism now so often attributed to Hume himself is
quite absurd and untenable:. If this is not enough of a revolution, another
scholar has gone so far as to suggest that Humes theory of mental activity is
essentially Kantian - or, not to get the cart before the horse, that Kants
philosophy is not so much a reaction to Humes as a Germanic expression of the
same general opinion2J.
It seems unlikely that one would want to go so far as to describe Hume as
either another Scottish Common Sense philosopher or a proto-Kantianzs. But
at the same time, it is clear that the empiricism-to-its-sceptical-conclusion
interpretation of Hume will not serve. For one thing, he does clearly echo
The Myth of British Empiricism 339
Hutchesons view that we are endowed with active minds, that we have a set of
faculties, instincts and propensities which determine how the elements of
moral and non-moral experience will be organised, and which provide us with a
set of natural beliefs which serve to organise and direct our behaviour.
Hutcheson, of course, was a clergyman, and inclined - indeed, much too
inclined, Hume said in his correspondence with Hutcheson himself - to
attribute these propensities and beliefs to the work of a benevolent Designer.
But though Hume himself eschewed reliance on what he called final causes
there can be no doubt but that he accepted and defended a modified and
non-religious version of Hutchesons psychology, which is itself significantly
different from Lockes, and like to Malebranchesz6.
Perhaps the surest way to show the inadequacy of the standard account.
which was British Empiricism coming to a logical conclusion in Humes per-
vasive scepticism, is to note briefly some of the things that Hume (contrary to
even quite recent repetitions of the myth) did not deny.
(i) Hume did not deny the existence of anything behind impressions27. On
the contrary, from the opening paragraph of the Treatise, Hume assumes that
there is an external world, and though he clearly and explicitly states that how it
affects us through the senses is not his concern, but that of the anatomist, he
makes no effort to overturn this assumption*. His own interest is in the
subsidiary elements of our mental processes, and their connections or inter-
relationships. As he himself puts it. it is vain to ask, Whether there be body or
not? That is a point, which we must take for granted in all our reasonings2s.
(ii) Hume did not deny that there is any real connection between cause and
effectO. Humes analysis of causality is empirical insofar as he tries to explain
why we believe in necessary connection even though we experience only
continuity, succession; and constant conjunction. But he is not, nor need he be
to be consistent, a negative dogmatist who claims that that which is not
experienced does not exist. Elasticity, gravity, cohesion of parts, communi-
cation of motion by impulse; these (he says) are probably the ultimate causes
and principles which we shall ever discover in nature for, so far as we can see,
as to the causes of these general causes, we should in vain attempt their
discovery . . . These ultimate springs and principles are totally shut up from
human curiosity and enquiry31. In short, some causes are experienced, but
there may indeed be others that at least for the present are beyond human
reach.
(iii) Hume did not deny that there is a unified self, nor did he unequivocally
deny that we can have an impression of the self. Much has been made of
Humes remarks in Of Personal Identity (Treatise, I, IV, VI), but even
assuming that Hume there does deny that we have an impression or direct
experience of the self, it does not appear, on careful reading, that he isclaiming
that each of us is in fact only a bundle of perceptions. Throughout Book I of
the Treatise. Hume is concerned with the elements of our mental processes, and
how such elements arise and combine. This concern does not, as we have seen,
require him to deny the existence of other aspects of reality even if we fail to
have direct experience of these aspects. It should be added also that Hume was
the first to suggest (in the Appendix to the Treatise) that the Book I account of
personal identity is inadequate. Likewise, the conclusions of Books II and III
340 David Fate Norton
of the Treatise, which are concerned with the passions and with morals, clearly
rest upon the assumption of a unified and enduring self, while frequent
reference is there made to our impressions of our selves3*.
(iv j Hume does not deny the value of metaphysics. It is not metaphysics per
se, but false and falsely based metaphysics which he suggests we bum. Hume is
certainly of the opinion that metaphysics at its best is often ineffectual and
subject to the control of seemingly unavoidable natural beliefs, and that at its
worst, which is all too often, metaphysics is rash, precipitate, dogmatical and
containing nothing but sophistry and illusion and fit only to be committed to
the flames%. Nevertheless, he also insisted that we must cultivate true meta-
physics with some care, in order to destroy the false and adulterate . . .
Accurate and just reasoning is the only catholic remedy, fitted for all persons
and all dispositions; and is alone able to subvert that abstruse philosophy and
metaphysical jargon, which [has]. . . the air of science and wisdom:S4.
(3) My third claim was that these so-called empiricists are in important ways
less empirical than a number of their 16th- and 17th-century predecessors.
There is a vast and very significant difference between the empiricism of
Bacon, which proceeds on the base of pure and uncritical collection and
induction, or that of Renaissance and 17th-century writers who compiled
centuries or syntagma on a wide variety of topics, and that of Hume. In fact,
once we are able to free ourselves of the dominating myth of British
Empiricism, it is not difficult to see that Hume, at least, not only draws our
attention to the fact that it is impossible to take a purely empirical approach to
any historical or philosophical issue, but that he also manifests some decidedly
a prioristic tendencies.
Hume clearly, I grant, set out to give the world, along the lines of Gassendis
constructive scepticism, a science of man, an observationally based science of
man. Reflection and meditation are not adequate, he says, and We must
therefore glean up our experiments in this science from a cautious observation
of human life, and take them as they appear in the common course of the world
. . Where experiments of this kind are judiciously collected and compared, we
may hope to establish on them a science. . .35. Hume realised, however, that
he would require a means of determining which statements about human life
are veridical -he realised that a pure and unselective empiricism would be of
very little value. Even a phenomenalistic science needs a criterion of truth, a
means of separating genuine phenomena from merely apparent phenomena.
Providing such a criterion, Hume realised from the outset of his work, would be
no simple matter, and as he continued his philosophical and historical efforts,
he seems to have come to the conclusion that providing the needed criterion
was an impossible task. Observation, to be of value, he saw, must be cautious,
but such cautious observation, he also concluded, is faced with the almost
certain knowledge that custom and education, ones personal experience, play
an over-riding, but logically indefensible part in the formation of our
empirical judgements. A very real element of personal bias, he concludes,
determines not only what we will accept as a fact, but where we will look for
facts. Does a man of sense, he says, run after every silly tale of witches or
hobgoblins or fairies, and canvass particularly the evidence?The question may
be rhetorical. but Hume made certain he was not misunderstood: I never knew
The Myth of British Empiricism 341
anyone. he goes on, that examined and deliberated about nonsense who did
not believe it before the end of his inquiries%.
Recent work has also revealed how aptly and unfortunately Hume illustrates
the kind of bias of which he spoke, and which undermines the very notion of
empiricism. Hume quite directly tells us, for example, that no amount of
positive evidence could ever establish the credibility of a miracle. Why?
Because it is always more likely that the purported miracle is only a fake, the
result of fraud and credulous ignorance, or, in more general terms, because LZ
priori considerations outweigh the putative evidence or appearances. It is not a
question of evidence, but of prior belief:. And Hume provides other illustra-
tions of his own critique of empiricism when he is unable to believe anything
which redounds to the credit of the Irish or Black?. It is more likely, he
suggests, that Cromwell and his lieutenants were honorable and humane, than
that any Irishman should behave in a civilised fashion. And when he hears,
contrary to his white supremacist view, that no Black ever discovered any
symptoms of ingenuity, when he hears, contrary to this view, that there is in
Jamaica a Black man of intelligence and accomplishment, he is able - one
could be kind and say compelled - to dismiss this alleged fact with the callous
remark that tis likely he is admired for very slender accomplishments, like a
parrot, who speaks a few words plainly3Y. A strange, but not, if Humes
analysis is correct, unusual empiricism.
To conclude: I do not insist that there are no philosophical differences
between, say, Leibniz and Hume, or that these differences are without signifi-
cance. Leibniz was clearly, for example, a superior mathematician, and he does
seem in his metaphysical writings to posit a greater role for reason than for
observation, and thus, in the best of all possible worlds, it might be acceptable
to call Leibniz a Continental Rationalist and Hume a British Empiricist. This is
not, however, that Utopian world, for we have a century or more of encrusted
myth to break down. Contrary to that myth, we know that the British did not
discover empiricism, that Locke, Berkeley and Hume borrowed significantly
from continental philosophers, and that much of what Berkeley and Hume did
was done without a copy of Lockes Essay (or, in Humes case, Berkeleys
Principles) open before them. We also know that Hume was an early critic -
i.e. conscious and explicit critic - of empiricism, and that he himself was by no
means the heroic empiricist-of-the-world that some picture. We would be
well-advised, then -providing our registrars or recorders will allow us to do so
- to drop entirely the empiricism-British Empiricism, rationalism-
Continental Rationalism tags. For, though it be impossible to be totally
unbiased, we could in this way rid ourselves of one of our cruder philosophical
myths.
*A slightly different version of this paper was presented to the American Society for
Eighteenth-Century Studies. I wish to thank Dr. David Brunner and Professor Harry M.
Bracken for valuable assistance in preparing it.
342 David Fate Norton
NOTES
sophy still bears the specific imprint of that study, and, in particular, that
Malebranches conception of seeing all things in God is at the back of the Berkelian
idea. (p. v) For the reaction of Berkeleys contemporaries to his philosophy, see
Harry M. Bracken, The Early Reception of Berkeleys Immaterialism (2nd. ed.,
rev. ; The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1%5).
14. George Berkeley, Philosophical Commentaries, ed. A.A. Lute (London: Thomas
Nelson and Sons, Ltd., 1944). Lute reordered Berkeleys entries in what has
generally been called Berkeleys Commonplace Book, and was thus able to trace
Berkeleys philosophical development in the years when his views were most
significantly formed.
15. George Berkeley, The Works of George Berkeley, ed. A.A. Lute and T.E. Jessop
(9 vols. ; London: Thomas Nelson and Sons, Ltd.. 1948-57), II, 235-36. Vol. I of
this edition contains the Philosophical Commentaries.
16. On Foucher, see Richard A. Watson, Foucher, Simon, Encyclopedia of
Philosophy, III, 21-3-14; The Downfall of Cartesianism, 1673-1712 (The Hague:
Martinus Nijhoff, 1966), pp. 39-70, 123--15; and Introduction, Simon Foucher,
Critique de la recherche de la v&it.4 (New York: Johnson Reprint Co., 1970).
17. Pierre Bayle. Pyrrhon, Dictionnaire Historique et Critique (1697;2nd. ed., 1704); a
convenient modern selection is the Historical and Critical Dictionary, ed. and trans.
Richard H. Popkin, with the assistance of Craig Brush (Indianapolis and New York:
The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Inc., 1965).
18. Berkeley, Philosophical Commentaries, passim, pp. 71 ff.
19. David Berman, On Missing the Wrong Target, a Criticism of some Chapters in
Jonathan Bennetts Locke, Berkeley, Hume: Central Themes, Hermathena 113
55-56, (1972).
20. R.H. Popkin, Did Hume Ever Read Berkeley?. Journal of Philosophy, 56,
535-45 (1959). Popkins article was written in response to one of the same title by
Philip P. Wiener, Journal of Philosophy, 56,532-35 (1959), and must be counted as
central in the reassessment of the history of 18th-century British philosophy.
21. This letter may be found in T. Kozanecki, Dawida Humes a nieznany listy w
zbiorach Muzeum Czartorykych-Polska, Archiwum Historii filozofii i MySri
Spolecznej, 9. 12741 (1963). See also R.H. Popkin, So, Hume Did Read
Berkeley, Journal of Philosophy, 61.773-78 (1964).
22. The similarity of Humes view of skepticism to that of Shaftesbury is discussed in
D.F. Norton, Shaftesbury and Two Skepticisms, Filosofia, 19 (Supplement0 al
fascicolo, 4. 1968), 713-24.
23. Norman Kemp Smith, op. cit., pp. 2-7.
24. Robert Paul Wolff, Humes Theory of Mental Activity. The Philosophical Review,
69.289-310 (1960).
25. A more balanced view than those of Smith and Wolff, in my opinion, is that of
Charles W. Hendel, as found in his Supplement, On Atomism: A Critique of
Humes First Principles and Method in Studies in the Philosophy of David Hume,
(2nd. ed. : Indianapolis and New York: The Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1962) pp. 379480.
My criticisms of Smiths efforts to make Hume another Scottish Common Sense
philosopher were given in Humes Defense of Rational Metaphysics, a paper read
at the American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division, March, 1973.
26. For Humes criticism of Hutcheson on final causes see The Lettersof David Hume,
ed. J.Y.T. Greig (2 ~01s: Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1932), I, 33. In my
opinion. a fully adequate account of Humes dependence on Hutcheson is not yet
available.
27. D.W. Hamlyn makes this claim in his article Empiricism, Encyclopedia of
Philosophy, II. 502.
344 David Fate Norton
28. David Hume, A Treatise of Human Nature, ed. L.A. Selby-Bigge (Oxford: The
Clarendon Press, 1888, reprinted, 1960). pp. 8,275-76.
29. Ibid., p. 187.
30. Hamlyn, op. cit., p. 503.
3 1. David Hume, Enquiries concerning the Human Understanding and concerning the
Principfes ofMorals, ed. L.A. Selby-Bigge (2nd ed.; Oxford: The Clarendon Press,
1902, reprinted l%l), p. 30. A useful discussion of Humes views on this topic is that
of Donald W. Livingston, Hume on Ultimate Causation, American Philosophicat
Quarterly, 8, 63-70 (January, 1971).
32. See especially Bk. II, I, II-IV; Bk. III, I, II.
33. Hume, Enquiries, p. 165.
34. Ibid., pp. 12-13.
35. Hume, Treatise, p. xxiii.
36. The Letters of David Hume, op. cit., p. 350. For a more detailed discussion of Hume
and the problem of weighing evidence, see History and Philosophy in Humes
Thought, in David Hume: Philosophical Historian, ed. D.F. Norton and R.H.
Popkin (Indianapolis and New York: The Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1965), pp. xxxii-I.
James Noxon, Humes Philosophical Development (Oxford: The Clarendon Press,
1973) provides additional information on the sources and development of some of
Humes central views.
37. See Of Miracles in Humes Enquiries, op. cit., pp. 109-131. On p. 127 Hume says:
Upon the whole, then, it appears that no testimony for any kind of miracle has ever
amounted to a probability, much less to a proof; and that, even supposing it
amounted to a proof, it would be opposed by another proof; derived from the very
nature of the fact, which it would endeavour to establish . and therefore we may
establishit as a maxim, that no human testimony can have such force as to prove a
miracle. . . .
38. Discussions of Humes racism can be found in R.H. Popkin, The Philosophical
Basis of Eighteenth-Century Racism, Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, Vol. 3:
Racism in the Eighteenth Centuty, ed. Harold E. Pagliano (Cleveland & London:
The Press of Case Western Reserve University, 1973) 245-62; and Harry M.
Bracken, Essence, Accident, and Race, Hermathena, 114 (1973).
39. Hume, Of National Characters, The Philosophical Works, op. cit., III, 252n.