
On Hume and the Limits of Reason
Reason is not the master. It never was. This three-hour episode traces the life and philosophy of David Hume, the thinker who followed the evidence of the senses wherever it led, even when it overturned the deepest assumptions of Western thought. What he found shook the foundations of philosophy so thoroughly that Kant said Hume woke him from his dogmatic slumber. We explore his empiricist theory of knowledge, his denial of the self, his revolutionary analysis of causation, the is-ought problem, his moral philosophy of sentiment and sympathy, his critique of miracles and natural religion, and the problem of induction that still haunts philosophy and science today. Hume emerges not as a destroyer of knowledge but as one of the most honest and courageous thinkers in the Western tradition.






