"This is an excellent book. Garrett provides a comprehensive yet concise introduction to Hume's thought that should be accessible to newcomers to Hume, including upper-level undergraduates. ... The interpretations he offers are nuanced and based on very careful readings of Hume's texts, and he is able to combine his sharp focus on the details of Hume's arguments with a panoramic view of Hume's project. ... [A]n important and interesting contribution to Hume scholarship that will be valuable for both specialists and newcomers to Hume." - Deborah Boyle, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
"Don Garrett is among the most distinguish and influential figures currently working on Hume and early modern philosophy. This is an important and illuminating contribution which will be received with considerable enthusiasm and interest by both specialists and the general reader. I expect it to rapidly establish itself as the standard general study of Hume's philosophy." - Paul Russell, University of British Columbia, Canada
"This is an outstanding, incredibly stimulating book. It contains ground-breaking discussions within its pages, including the attention paid to Hume's account of mental representation, the centrality in Hume of what Garrett calls 'sense-based' concepts, and a fascinating reconstruction of Hume's naturalistic account of normativity. It will be studied and debated for years to come." - P. J. E. Kail, University of Oxford, UK
"The best introductory treatment of Hume's philosophy on the market. More than this, Garrett shows how Hume's project is unified by the common structure of the senses - including moral and 'causal' senses - which shape our conceptions of the world, and enable our critical engagement with it." - Donald C. Ainslie, University of Toronto, Canada
"An elegant, accessible, and well-grounded treatment of the central themes in David Hume's philosophy. Garrett provides an illuminating account of the role that skeptical themes play in Hume's position without, as some have, minimizing them. His grasp and admiration of Hume's writings is evident throughout this work, yielding a central contribution to Hume scholarship." - Robert Fogelin, Dartmouth College, USA
"Don Garrett is among the most distinguish and influential figures currently working on Hume and early modern philosophy. This is an important and illuminating contribution which will be received with considerable enthusiasm and interest by both specialists and the general reader. I expect it to rapidly establish itself as the standard general study of Hume's philosophy." - Paul Russell, University of British Columbia, Canada
"This is an outstanding, incredibly stimulating book. It contains ground-breaking discussions within its pages, including the attention paid to Hume's account of mental representation, the centrality in Hume of what Garrett calls 'sense-based' concepts, and a fascinating reconstruction of Hume's naturalistic account of normativity. It will be studied and debated for years to come." - P. J. E. Kail, University of Oxford, UK
"The best introductory treatment of Hume's philosophy on the market. More than this, Garrett shows how Hume's project is unified by the common structure of the senses - including moral and 'causal' senses - which shape our conceptions of the world, and enable our critical engagement with it." - Donald C. Ainslie, University of Toronto, Canada
"An elegant, accessible, and well-grounded treatment of the central themes in David Hume's philosophy. Garrett provides an illuminating account of the role that skeptical themes play in Hume's position without, as some have, minimizing them. His grasp and admiration of Hume's writings is evident throughout this work, yielding a central contribution to Hume scholarship." - Robert Fogelin, Dartmouth College, USA