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Porter Kaufman's avatar

I’m back because I just read the Lewis chapter.

You say: “Hume is a skeptic in that he likely agreed with many radical skeptical conclusions, that we can’t be completely certain about many foundational truths. But Hume also thought that it was unfeasible to live one’s life this way.”

I’m assuming you are not a pragmatist and seeing as pragmatism wasn’t really around yet Hume probably was not either. Anyways, I just thought this was an interesting tid bit because as far as I can tell Hume is pretty pragmatic.

Moving on…

What’s now very odd to me about this whole chapter is that up to this point in Miracles, Lewis has been concerned primarily with showing that miracles are possible. So, you’d imagine once he gets to the chapter on Hume and Probability this chapter would unfold more like “given miracles are possible are they probable,” but then, as you say, Lewis basically says (incorrectly) that Hume is saying they are not possible. Here’s why this is real head scratcher for me: if you’ve already said miracles are possible, and you think Hume is just saying they are impossible, then you don’t even need to comment on Hume at all. You’ve already done that work.

Tell me if I’m missing something because I’ve been reading quite quickly to get through all the Lewis stuff so I might’ve missed something. But if I’m right, it just seems to me Lewis was totally out of his depth. Or he at least originally thought Hume was making a probabilistic argument, but then after engaging Hume (however much he did) he misunderstood him but thought it still good to have this chapter since Hume is the big bad skeptic.

Porter Kaufman's avatar

Now I have read this post, and I’m glad I have. I actually read Of Miracles in undergrad and tried to rebut it. My professor kindly critiqued my response. He said, “that was a good effort but you may need to go back and read it again.” With that said, I did not, like Lewis, claim that Hume was arguing circularly.

I’ve grown a bit more admiration for Hume over time. He’s a fun critic, and (rightly or wrongly) he actually has made my credence for Christianity in some respects go up.

I’m planning on reading Miracles by Lewis soon and then Hume’s Dialogues and Of Miracles later, so hopefully I’ll have more to say (at a much later date). For now, I think it’s right to say that people come to believe in miracles after they have already made other philosophical commitments (metaphysical, ontological, and (maybe) epistemological). Finally, I do wonder if Pascal’s wager (for better or worse) should compel one to look at some miracle claims.

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