|
See also: born at See also: Strachan in See also: Kincardineshire, on the 26th of See also: April 1710
.
His See also: father was See also: minister of the place for fifty years, and traced his descent from a long See also: line of Presbyterian ministers on Dee-See also: side
.
His See also: mother belonged to the brilliant See also: Gregory See also: family (q.v.), which, in the 18th century, gave so many representatives to literature and science in Scotland
.
See also: Reid graduated at See also: Aberdeen in 1726, and remained there as librarian to the university for ten years, a See also: period which he devoted largely to mathematical See also: reading
.
In 1737 he was presented to the living of Newmachar near Aberdeen
.
The parishioners, violently excited at the See also: time about the See also: law of patronage, received him with open hostility; and tradition asserts that his See also: uncle defended him on the pulpit See also: stair with a See also: drawn sword
.
Though not distinguished as a preacher, he was successful in winning the affections of his See also: people
.
The publication of Hume's See also: treatise turned his See also: attention to philosophy, and in particular to the theory of See also: external perception
.
His first publication, however, dealt with a question of philosophical method suggested by the reading of See also: Hutcheson
.
The " Essay on Quantity, occasioned by reading a Treatise in which See also: Simple and Compound Ratios are applied to Virtue and Merit," denies the possibility of a mathematical treatment of moral subjects
.
The essay appeared in the Transactions of the Royal Society (1748)
.
In 1740 Reid married a See also: cousin, the daughter of a See also: London physician
.
In 1752 the professors of See also: King's
See also: College, Aberdeen, elected him to the chair of philosophy, which he held for twelve years
.
The foundation of the Aberdeen Philosophical Society (the " Wise See also: Club "), which numbered among its members See also: Campbell,
See also: Beattie, See also: Gerard and Dr See also: John Gregory, was mainly owing to the exertions of Reid, who was secretary for the first
See also: year (1758)
.
Many of the subjects of discussion were drawn from Hume's speculations; and during the last years of his stay in Aberdeen Reid propounded his new point of view in several papers read before the society
.
The results of these papers were embodied in the Enquiry into the Human Mind on the Principles of See also: Common Sense (1764)
.
The Enquiry does not go beyond an analysis of sense perception, and is therefore more limited in scope than the later Essays; but if the latter are more mature, there is more freshness about the earlier See also: work
.
In this year, Reid succeeded See also: Adam See also: Smith as professor of moral philosophy in the university of
See also: Glasgow
.
After seventeen years of active teaching, he retired in See also: order to See also: complete his philosophical See also: system
.
As a lecturer, he was inferior in charm and eloquence to See also: Brown and
See also: Stewart; the latter says that " silent and respectful attention " was accorded to the " simplicity and perspicuity of his
See also: style " and " the gravity and authority of his character." His philosophical influence was exerted largely through the writings of Dugald Stewart and See also: Sir See also: William
See also: Hamilton
.
The Essays on the Intellectual
See also: Powers of See also: Man appeared in 1785, and their ethical complement, the Essays on the Active Powers of the Human Mind, in 1788
.
These, with an account of See also: Aristotle's Logic appended to See also: Lord See also: Kames's Sketches of the See also: History of Man (1774), conclude the See also: list of See also: works published in Reid's lifetime
.
Hamilton's edition of Reid also contains an account of the university of Glasgow and a selection of Reid's letters, chiefly addressed to his Aberdeen See also: friends the Skenes, to Lord Kames, and to Dr See also: James Gregory
.
With the two last named he discussed the materialism of .
See also: Priestley andthe theory of necessitarianism
.
He reverted in his old age to the mathematical pursuits of his earlier years, and his ardour for knowledge of every kind remained fresh to the last . He died of paralysis on the 7th ofSee also: October 1796, his wife and all his See also: children save one having predeceased him
.
His portrait by See also: Raeburn is the See also: property of Glasgow University, and in the See also: National Portrait Gallery, See also: Edinburgh, there is a See also: good medallion by Tassie, taken in his eighty-first year
.
His character was marked by independence, See also: economy and generosity
.
The See also: key to Reid's philosophy is to be found in his revulsion from the sceptical conclusions of Hume
.
In several passages of his writings he expressly
See also: dates his philosophical awakening from the appearance of the Treatise of Human Nature
.
In the dedication of the Enquiry, he says: " The ingenious author of that treatise upon the principles of Locke—who was no sceptic—hath built a system of scepticism which leaves no ground to believe any one thing rather than its contrary
.
His reasoning appeared to me to be just; there was, therefore, a See also: necessity to See also: call in question the principles upon which it was founded, or to admit the conclusion." Reid thus takes Hume's scepticism as, on its own showing, a reductio ad impossibile (see HumE, ad fin.) of accepted philosophical principles, and refuses, accordingly, to See also: separate Hume from his intellectual progenitors
.
From its origin in See also: Descartes and onwards through See also: Locke and See also: Berkeley, See also: modern philosophy carried with it, Reid contends, the germ of scepticism
.
Embracing the whole philosophic See also: movement under the name of " the Cartesian system," Reid detects its fundamental error in the unproved See also: assumption shared by these thinkers " that all the See also: objects of my knowledge are ideas in my own mind." This See also: doctrine or hypothesis he usually speaks of as ' the ideal system " or " the theory of ideas "; and to it he opposes his own analysis of the See also: act of perception
.
In view of the results of this analysis, Reid's theory (and the theory of Scottish philosophy generally) has been dubbed natural See also: realism or natural dualism, in contrast to theories like subjective idealism and materialism or to the cosmothetic idealism or hypothetical dualism of the majority of philosophers
.
But this unduly narrows the scope of Scottish philosophy, which does not exhaust itself, as is sometimes supposed, in uncritically reasserting the See also: independent existence of See also: matter and its immediate presence to mind
.
The real significance of Reid's doctrine lies in its attack upon Hume's fundamental principles, (1) that all our perceptions are distinct existences, and (2) that the mind never perceives any real connexion among distinct existences (cf . Appendix to the third See also: volume of the Treatise, 1740)
.
It is here that the danger of " the ideal system " really lies—in its reduction of reality to " particular perceptions," essentially unconnected with each other
.
This theory admitted, nothing is See also: left for philosophy save to explain the illusion of necessary connexion
.
Reid, however, attacks the fundamental assumption
.
In logical language, he denies the actuality of the abstract particular
.
The unit of knowledge is not an isolated impression but a See also: judgment; and in such a judgment is contained, even initially, the reference both to a permanent subject and to a permanent See also: world of thought, and, implied in these, such judgments, for example, as those of existence, substance, cause and effect
.
Such principles are not derived from sensation, but are " suggested " on occasion of sensation, in such a way as to constitute the necessary conditions of our having perceptive experience at all
.
Thus we do not start with " ideas, and afterwards refer them to objects; we are never restricted to our own minds, but are from the first immediately related to a permanent world
.
Reid has a variety of names for the principles which, by their presence, lift us out of subjectivity into perception
.
He calls them " natural judgments," " natural suggestions," " judgments of nature," " judgments immediately inspired by our constitution," " principles of our nature," " first principles," " principles of common sense." The last common designation, which became the current one, was un- Sense
.
doubtedly unfortunate, and has conveyed to many a false impression of Scottish philosophy
.
It has been understood as if Reid had merely appealed from the reasoned conclusions of philosophers to the unreasoned beliefs of common See also: life
.
But Reid's actions are better than his words; his real mode of procedure is to redargue Hume's conclusions by a refutation of the premises inherited by him from his predecessors
.
For the rest, as regards the question of nomenclature, Reid everywhere unites common sense and reason, making the former " only another name for one branch or degree of reason." Reason, as judging of things self-evident, is called common sense to distinguish it from ratiocination or reasoning
.
And in regard to Reid's favourite proof of the principles in question by reference to " the consent of ages and nations, of the learned and unlearned," it is only See also: fair to observe that this See also: argument assumes a much more scientific See also: form in the Essays, where it is almost identified with an See also: appeal to " the structure and grammar of all See also: languages." " The structure of all languages," he says, " is grounded upon common sense." To take but one example, " the distinction between sensible qualities and the substance to which they belong, and between thought and the mind that thinks, is not the invention of philosophers; it is found
in the structure of all languages, and therefore must be common to all men who speak with understanding " (Hamilton's Reid, pp
.
224, and 454)
.
he principles which Reid insists upon as everywhere See also: present in experience evidently correspond See also: pretty closely to the Kantian Reid and categories and the unity of apperception
.
Similarly, Reid's See also: Rent assertion of the essential distinction between space or
extension and feeling or any succession of feelings may be compared with See also: Kant's doctrine in the Aesthetic
.
" Space, may he says, " whether tangible or visible, is not so properly an See also: object [Kant's " matter ") as a necessary concomitant of the objects both of sight and touch." Like Kant, too, Reid finds in space the source of a necessity which sense, as sense, cannot give (Hamilton's Reid, p
.
323)
.
In the substance of their answer to Hume, the two philosophers have therefore much in common
.
But Reid lacked the See also: art to give due impressiveness to the important advance which his positions really contain
.
Although at times he states his principles with a wonderful degree of breadth and insight, he See also: mars the effect by looseness of statement, and by the incorporation of irrelevant psychological matter
.
And, if Kant was overridden by a love of symmetry, Reid's indifference to form and system is an even more dangerous defect . Further, Reid is inclined to See also: state his principles dogmatically rather than as logical deductions
.
The transcendental deduction, or proof from the possibility of experience in general, which forms the vital centre of the Kantian scheme, is wanting in Reid ; or, at all events, if the spirit of the proof is occasionally present, it is nowhere adequately See also: developed
.
Nevertheless, Reid's insistence on judgment as the unit of knowledge and his See also: sharp distinction between sensation and perception must still be recognized as of the highest importance
.
The relativism or phenomenalism which Hamilton afterwards adopted from Kant and sought to engraft upon Scottish philosophy The is wholly absent from the See also: original Scottish doctrine
.
One Scottish or two passages may certainly be quoted from Reid in
School . which he asserts that we know only properties of things
and are ignorant of their essence
.
But the exact meaning which he attaches to such expressions is not quite clear; and they occur, moreover, only incidentally and with the air of current phrases mechanically repeated
.
Dugald Stewart, however, deliberately emphasizes the merely qualitative nature of our knowledge as the foundation of philosophical argument, and thus paves the way for the thoroughgoing philosophy of nescience elaborated by Hamilton
.
But since Hamilton's time the most typical Scottish thinkers have repudiated his relativistic doctrine, and returned to the original tradition of the school
.
For Reid's ethical theory, see See also: ETHICS
.
The complete edition of the works by Sir William Hamilton, published in two volumes with notes and supplementary See also: dissertations by the editor (6th ed
.
1863), has superseded all others
.
For Reid's life see D . Stewart's Memoir prefixed to Hamilton's edition of Reid's works . See also McCosh, Scottish Philosophers (1875); Rait, See also: Universities of Aberdeen, pp
.
199-203, 223; A
.
C
.
See also: Fraser, Monograph (1898); A
.
Bain, See also: Mental Science, p
.
207, p
.
422 (for his theory of See also: free will), and Appendix, pp
.
29, 63, 88, 89
.
(A
.
S
.
|
|
|
[back] SIR WILLIAM REID (1791-1858) |
[next] THOMAS MAYNE REID (1818-1883) |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.