Showing posts with label B. (figures)-M-Peter Millican. Show all posts
Showing posts with label B. (figures)-M-Peter Millican. Show all posts

2018-03-17

Introduction to David Hume's Treatise of Human Nature (Book One) by Peter Millican at Oxford University


source: CosmoLearning         2017年7月23日
Course Description: Dr Peter Millican gives a series of lectures looking at Scottish 18th Century Philosopher David Hume and the first book of his Treatise of Human Nature.
Taken from: https://podcasts.ox.ac.uk/series/intr...
This content is available under a Creative Commons license (free to share, non-commercial)

1a Hume's Theory of Ideas and the Faculties 20:44
1b The Theory of Ideas 32:03
1c Hume's Faculty Psychology 28:28
2 Hume's Theory of Relations 20:21
3a Hume's Theory of General or Abstract Ideas 22:11
3b Space and Time 27:52
4a Relations, and a Detour to the Causal Maxim 20:38
4b The Argument Concerning Induction 35:52
4c Belief and Probability 29:04
4d Of the Necessary Connection 36:04
4e Understanding Hume on Causation 25:55
4f The Point of Hume's Analysis of Causation 9:07
5a Of Skepticism with Regard to Reason 16:19
5b Of Skepticism with Regard to the Senses 24:34
5c Of the Ancient and Modern Philosophies 52:06

2013-08-15

General Philosophy (by Professor Peter Millican at Oxford, 2009)

# automatic playlist for the 33 videos (click the upper-left icon) 

source: University of Oxford     Last updated on 2014年7月2日
A series of lectures delivered by Peter Millican to first-year philosophy students at the University of Oxford. The lectures comprise the 8-week General Philosophy course and were delivered in late 2009. Slides for all his lectures can be found here: http://podcasts.ox.ac.uk/people/peter...

1.1 An Introduction to General Philosophy 5:55
1.2 The Birth of Modern Philosophy 15:56
1.3 From Aristotle to Galileo 18:14
1.4 The Birth of the Early Modern Period: From Galileo to Descartes 10:49
2.1 Recap of General Philosophy Lecture 1 5:50
2.2 Introduction to Thomas Hobbes 11:35
2.3 Robert Boyle's Corpuscularian Theory 6:21
2.4 Isaac Newton and Instrumentalism 7:58
2.5 Introduction to John Locke 12:16
2.6 George Berkeley and Idealism 9:31
3.1 Introduction to David Hume 19:36
3.2 David Hume: Concluding Remarks 10:35
3.3 The Problem of Induction 23:00
4.1 Scepticism of the External World 8:48
4.2 Possible Answers to Scepticism of the External World 9:09
4.3 Introduction to Cartesian Dualism 22:13
4.4 Modern Responses to Dualism 10:56
5.1 Introduction to Knowledge 10:32
5.2 The Traditional Analysis of Knowledge 16:39
5.3 Gettier and Other Complications 14:49
5.4 Scepticism, Externalism and the Ethics of Belief 12:33
6.1 Introduction to Primary and Secondary Qualities 14:33
6.2 Problems with Resemblance 10:56
6.3 Abstraction and Idealism 10:18
6.4 Making Sense of Perception 16:38
7.1 Free Will, Determinism and Choice 18:49
7.2 Different Concepts of Freedom 14:06
7.3 Hume on Liberty and Necessity 10:05
7.4 Making Sense of Free Will and Moral Responsibility 9:49
8.1 Introduction to Personal Identity 8:54
8.2 John Locke on Personal Identity 15:06
8.3 Problems for Locke's View of Personal Identity 9:41
8.4 Persons, Humans and Brains 11:03