Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Machiavelli, Hobbes, Rousseau
- Part II Responses to (and Partial Incorporations of) Civil Religion within the Liberal Tradition
- 9 Baruch Spinoza
- 10 Philosophy and Piety
- 11 Spinoza's Interpretation of the Commonwealth of the Hebrews, and Why Civil Religion Is a Continuing Presence in His Version of Liberalism
- 12 John Locke
- 13 “The Gods of the Philosophers” I
- 14 Bayle's Republic of Atheists
- 15 Montesquieu's Pluralized Civil Religion
- 16 The Straussian Rejection of the Enlightenment as Applied to Bayle and Montesquieu
- 17 “The Gods of the Philosophers” II
- 18 Hume as a Successor to Bayle
- 19 Adam Smith's Sequel to Hume (and Hobbes)
- 20 Christianity as a Civil Religion
- 21 John Stuart Mill's Project to Turn Atheism into a Religion
- 22 Mill's Critics
- 23 John Rawls's Genealogy of Liberalism
- 24 Prosaic Liberalism
- Part III Theocratic Responses to Liberalism
- Part IV Postmodern “Theism”
- Conclusion
- Index
- References
18 - Hume as a Successor to Bayle
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Machiavelli, Hobbes, Rousseau
- Part II Responses to (and Partial Incorporations of) Civil Religion within the Liberal Tradition
- 9 Baruch Spinoza
- 10 Philosophy and Piety
- 11 Spinoza's Interpretation of the Commonwealth of the Hebrews, and Why Civil Religion Is a Continuing Presence in His Version of Liberalism
- 12 John Locke
- 13 “The Gods of the Philosophers” I
- 14 Bayle's Republic of Atheists
- 15 Montesquieu's Pluralized Civil Religion
- 16 The Straussian Rejection of the Enlightenment as Applied to Bayle and Montesquieu
- 17 “The Gods of the Philosophers” II
- 18 Hume as a Successor to Bayle
- 19 Adam Smith's Sequel to Hume (and Hobbes)
- 20 Christianity as a Civil Religion
- 21 John Stuart Mill's Project to Turn Atheism into a Religion
- 22 Mill's Critics
- 23 John Rawls's Genealogy of Liberalism
- 24 Prosaic Liberalism
- Part III Theocratic Responses to Liberalism
- Part IV Postmodern “Theism”
- Conclusion
- Index
- References
Summary
The fanatical spirit, let loose, confounded all regards to ease, safety, interest, and dissolved every moral and civil obligation. The great courage and conduct, displayed by many of the popular leaders, have commonly inclined men to do them, in one respect, more honor than they deserve, and to suppose, that, like able politicians, they employed pretexts, which they secretly despised, in order to serve their selfish purposes. ‘Tis however probable, if not certain, that they were, generally speaking, the dupes of their own zeal.…So congenial to the human mind are religious sentiments, that, where the temper is not guarded by a philosophical skepticism, the most cool and determined, it is impossible to counterfeit long these holy fervors, without feeling some share of the assumed warmth.
– David Hume[P]hilosophers, who cultivate reason and reflection, stand less in need of [religious] motives to keep them under the restraint of morals; and…the vulgar, who alone may need them, are utterly incapable of so pure a religion, as represents the Deity to be pleased with nothing but virtue in human behaviour.
– David Hume[A folly] derivd from Religion [is one that has] flowed from a Source, which has, from uniform Prescription, acquird a Right to impose Nonsense on all Nations & all Ages.
– David HumeNo good comes in the end of untrue beliefs.
– Iris MurdochHume presents “superstition” and “enthusiasm” as two aberrational “corruptions of true religion.” Nonetheless, no alert reader could fail to suspect that Hume in fact believes that these two ideal–typical extremes describe a continuum of religious possibilities that comprehends the totality of religions known throughout history. The “superstitious” give power to priests in the hope of compensating for their own unworthiness to communicate with God; the “enthusiastic” whip themselves up into a state of unshakeable conviction of their religious competence to interact directly with God, without reliance on the higher competence of priests. All known religions fall somewhere between the poles of this continuum. Even if one were persuaded that in Hume's view there is the hypothetical possibility of a “philosophical religion” elevated above this continuum of false religions, Hume makes very clear that such a philosophical religion is morally, politically, culturally, and historically irrelevant: Religion just is (one variety or another of) false religion. (Hume would have found it unimaginable that fully secular societies were on the horizon, historically speaking; he writes that although “it will probably become difficult to persuade [nations in a future age] that any human, two-legged creature could ever embrace [principles as absurd as the doctrine of Transubstantiation], it is a thousand to one, but these nations themselves shall have something full as absurd in their own creed.”)
Hume directly challenges the idea of a civil religion. (Admittedly, nothing is ever entirely “direct” in Hume, for he adopts a whole range of ingenious literary devices to mask the directness of his challenge.) In the Enquiry concerning Human Understanding, Section XI, the question is posed in terms of whether the atheist inquiries of a philosopher like Epicurus can proceed “in great harmony” with the society in which such philosophers live. Hume states, in his own voice, the question, namely whether Epicurean subversion of civic beliefs (“the established superstition”) “loosen[s], in a great measure, the ties of morality, and may be supposed, for that reason, pernicious to the peace of civil society.” Hume puts the answer to this challenge in the mouth of “a friend who loves skeptical paradoxes.” The so-called friend aims to demonstrate that “when, in my philosophical disquisitions, I deny a providence and a future state, I undermine not the foundations of society.”
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- Civil ReligionA Dialogue in the History of Political Philosophy, pp. 229 - 236Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010