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Single Idea 2189

[filed under theme 12. Knowledge Sources / D. Empiricism / 2. Associationism ]

Full Idea

To me, there appear to be only three principles of connection between ideas, namely, Resemblance, Contiguity in time or place, and Cause or Effect.

Clarification

'Contiguity' means closeness

Gist of Idea

All ideas are connected by Resemblance, Contiguity in time or place, and Cause and Effect

Source

David Hume (Enquiry Conc Human Understanding [1748], III.19)

Book Ref

Hume,David: 'Enquiries Conc. Human Understanding, Morals', ed/tr. Selby-Bigge/Nidditch [OUP 1975], p.24


The 18 ideas with the same theme [knowledge built by ideas forming links in the mind]:

Once we have experienced two feelings together, one will always give rise to the other [Spinoza]
Some ideas connect together naturally, while others connect by chance or custom [Locke]
Knowledge is just the connection or disagreement of our ideas [Locke]
The constant link between whiteness and things that produce it is the basis of our knowledge [Locke]
All ideas are connected by Resemblance, Contiguity in time or place, and Cause and Effect [Hume]
Associationism results from having to explain intentionality just with sense-data [Robinson,H on Hume]
Associations and causes cannot explain content, which needs norms of judgement [Kant, by Pinkard]
I exist just as an intelligence aware of its faculty for combination [Kant]
Association of ideas is the best philosophical idea of the prescientific age [Peirce]
We talk of 'association by resemblance' but that is wrong: the association constitutes the resemblance [Peirce]
Humean impressions are too instantaneous and simple to have structure or relations [Harré/Madden]
Gestalt psychology proposes inbuilt proximity, similarity, smoothness and closure principles [Goldman]
Associationism can't explain how truth is preserved [Fodor]
According to empiricists abstraction is the fundamental mental process [Fodor]
Associations are held to connect Ideas together in the way the world is connected together [Fodor]
Connectionists say the mind is a general purpose learning device [Pinker]
Rats find some obvious associations easier to learn than less obvious ones [Ladyman/Ross]
Modern empiricism tends to emphasise psychological connections, not semantic relations [Margolis/Laurence]