《克拉伦登版休谟文集

IF 0.3 4区 哲学 N/A PHILOSOPHY
Lorne Falkenstein
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These are the essays familiar to those who know Eugene Miller’s Liberty Fund collection of Hume’s Essays with some exceptions: My Own Life, “Of Suicide,” and “Of the Immortality of the Soul” are not included. Essays that Hume decided to withdraw from later editions of EMP or EMPL precede the retained essays, collected in parts by withdrawal date. (This is a nice touch, which better captures the history of their appearance and disappearance.) A dedication to John Home, which appeared in some copies of Four Dissertations, and a list of “Scotticisms,” which appeared at various places in some copies of the first edition of Hume’s Political Discourses (incorporated into EMP and EMPL) are included as appendices. These are decisions that reflect the contents of the published texts, as they appeared from 1741 to 1777 (1:xxvii–xxviii). Hume wanted My Own Life to be prefaced to the posthumous 1777 edition of ETSS (1:444–45), but his publisher, Strahan, chose to publish it as an independent pamphlet instead. The essays “Of Suicide” and [End Page 297] “Of the Immortality of the Soul” were only briefly intended for publication in Four Dissertations (incorporated into ETSS) and did not appear in the released edition. They, too, only appeared posthumously. The editors project a volume containing Hume’s posthumous writings (1:401n1), which should include these works. Though the essays on suicide and immortality are not included, their history is presented over 1:430–31, importantly supplemented by 1:467–68. The dedication to John Home was published during Hume’s lifetime, though only in his Four Dissertations of 1757. As the editors note (1:695–96) it was highly controversial at the time and historically significant, both as an episode in Hume’s own troubles with the Scottish Kirk, and as an indication of the weakening of the control of the clergy over Scottish culture. It merits inclusion somewhere in a critical edition of Hume’s writings. The obvious place is in the company of the works that originally appeared in Four Dissertations. Those works are distributed over three volumes of the Clarendon Hume editions, those containing the Enquiry concerning Human Understanding, the Dissertation on the Passions, the Natural History of Religion, and EMPL. This raises the question of which volume would be the one a scholar would be most inclined to consult when searching for the dedication. Since the dedication raises the issue of free speech and Hume was in trouble over what he had said with bearing on religion, one appropriate location would be the volume containing the Natural History, as the dedication applauds a one-time Kirk minister who dared to write a tragedy and get it performed on the Edinburgh stage. Another would be in the company of the literary essays that appeared in Four Dissertations: “Of Tragedy” and “Standard of Taste,” which Hume assigned to EMPL. The editors have opted for the latter. Hume’s different editions of his essays were often prefaced with advertisements and notifications. The most famous is the note in the 1777 edition disowning the Treatise. It is rightly excluded from these volumes of the Clarendon Hume because it was directed for insertion in volumes of ETSS that do not contain EMPL.1 The remaining advertisements and notifications are hard to find. 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A dedication to John Home, which appeared in some copies of Four Dissertations, and a list of “Scotticisms,” which appeared at various places in some copies of the first edition of Hume’s Political Discourses (incorporated into EMP and EMPL) are included as appendices. These are decisions that reflect the contents of the published texts, as they appeared from 1741 to 1777 (1:xxvii–xxviii). Hume wanted My Own Life to be prefaced to the posthumous 1777 edition of ETSS (1:444–45), but his publisher, Strahan, chose to publish it as an independent pamphlet instead. The essays “Of Suicide” and [End Page 297] “Of the Immortality of the Soul” were only briefly intended for publication in Four Dissertations (incorporated into ETSS) and did not appear in the released edition. They, too, only appeared posthumously. The editors project a volume containing Hume’s posthumous writings (1:401n1), which should include these works. Though the essays on suicide and immortality are not included, their history is presented over 1:430–31, importantly supplemented by 1:467–68. The dedication to John Home was published during Hume’s lifetime, though only in his Four Dissertations of 1757. As the editors note (1:695–96) it was highly controversial at the time and historically significant, both as an episode in Hume’s own troubles with the Scottish Kirk, and as an indication of the weakening of the control of the clergy over Scottish culture. It merits inclusion somewhere in a critical edition of Hume’s writings. The obvious place is in the company of the works that originally appeared in Four Dissertations. Those works are distributed over three volumes of the Clarendon Hume editions, those containing the Enquiry concerning Human Understanding, the Dissertation on the Passions, the Natural History of Religion, and EMPL. 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It is rightly excluded from these volumes of the Clarendon Hume because it was directed for insertion in volumes of ETSS that do not contain EMPL.1 The remaining advertisements and notifications are hard to find. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

《克拉伦登版休谟文集》洛恩·法尔肯斯坦(传记)大卫·休谟。散文,道德,政治和文学:批判版。汤姆·l·比彻姆、马克·a·博克斯与迈克尔·西尔弗索恩、j·a·w·冈恩、f·大卫·哈维合编,2卷。牛津:克拉伦登出版社,2021。1200页。ISBN: 97880198847090。175美元。正如其标题所反映的那样,《克拉伦登随笔,道德,政治和文学》包含了休谟一生中出现的随笔,标题为《随笔,道德和政治》(EMP)和《随笔,道德,政治和文学》(EMPL)。(后者出现在休谟更大的《若干主题的论文》[ETSS]的副标题中。)它包括在后来的版本中从empp或EMPL中撤回的部分,以及休谟在1764年和1777年添加到EMPL中的文章。这些是那些熟悉尤金·米勒自由基金收集的休谟散文的人所熟悉的文章,除了一些例外:我自己的生活,“自杀”和“灵魂不朽”不包括在内。休谟决定从《EMP》或《EMPL》后来的版本中撤回的论文,在保留的论文之前,按撤回日期部分收集。(这是一个不错的修饰,更好地捕捉了它们出现和消失的历史。)对约翰·霍姆的献词出现在《四篇论文》的一些副本中,“苏格兰主义”的列表出现在休谟的第一版《政治话语》(被纳入EMP和EMPL)的一些副本中的不同地方,作为附录包括在内。这些决定反映了从1741年到1777年出版的案文的内容(1:28 7 - 28 8)。休谟想把《我自己的一生》作为他死后出版的1777年版ETSS(1:44 - 45)的序言,但他的出版商斯特拉汉选择将其作为一本独立的小册子出版。《论自杀》和《论灵魂的不朽》这两篇文章只是短暂地打算发表在《四篇论文》(被纳入ETSS)中,并没有出现在发行版中。它们也只是在死后才出现。编辑们计划出版一卷休谟的遗作(1:40 . 11),其中应该包括这些作品。虽然没有包括关于自杀和不朽的文章,但它们的历史在1:43 - 31之间呈现,重要的是1:467-68补充。对约翰·霍姆的献词是在休谟生前发表的,尽管只在他1757年的四篇论文中发表。正如编辑们所指出的(1:695-96),这在当时是极具争议的,而且具有重要的历史意义,既是休谟自己与苏格兰教会的纠纷中的一个插曲,也是神职人员对苏格兰文化控制减弱的一个迹象。它值得收录在休谟著作的评论版中。最明显的地方是与最初出现在《四篇论文》中的作品在一起。这些作品分布在克拉伦登·休谟版本的三卷本中,其中包括《关于人类理解的探究》、《激情论文》、《宗教自然史》和《EMPL》。这就提出了一个问题,即学者在寻找献词时最倾向于参考哪一卷。由于献词提出了言论自由的问题,而休谟因其言论与宗教有关而陷入困境,一个合适的位置将是包含《自然史》的那一卷,因为献词赞扬了一位敢于写悲剧并在爱丁堡舞台上演出的前柯克牧师。另一个是在《四篇论文》中出现的文学散文:“悲剧”和“品味标准”,这是休谟分配给EMPL的。编辑们选择了后者。休谟的不同版本的随笔经常以广告和通知作为前言。其中最著名的是1777年版中否认《人性论》的注释。它被正确地排除在克拉伦登休谟的这些卷中,因为它是为插入不包含empl的ETSS卷而设计的。剩下的广告和通知很难找到。它们附在修订本/修订本第三部分的引言部分(1:52 29 - 30…)
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Clarendon Edition of Hume’s Essays
The Clarendon Edition of Hume’s Essays Lorne Falkenstein (bio) David Hume. Essays, Moral, Political, and Literary: A Critical Edition. Edited by Tom L. Beauchamp and Mark A. Box, with Michael Silverthorne, J. A. W. Gunn, and F. David Harvey. 2 volumes. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2021. Pp. 1200. ISBN: 97880198847090. $175. As reflected in its title, the Clarendon Essays, Moral, Political, and Literary contains essays that appeared over the course of Hume’s lifetime under the titles Essays, Moral and Political (EMP) and Essays, Moral, Political, and Literary (EMPL). (The latter appears as a subtitle within Hume’s larger Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects [ETSS].) It includes pieces that were withdrawn from EMP or EMPL in later editions, as well as essays Hume added to EMPL in 1764 and 1777. These are the essays familiar to those who know Eugene Miller’s Liberty Fund collection of Hume’s Essays with some exceptions: My Own Life, “Of Suicide,” and “Of the Immortality of the Soul” are not included. Essays that Hume decided to withdraw from later editions of EMP or EMPL precede the retained essays, collected in parts by withdrawal date. (This is a nice touch, which better captures the history of their appearance and disappearance.) A dedication to John Home, which appeared in some copies of Four Dissertations, and a list of “Scotticisms,” which appeared at various places in some copies of the first edition of Hume’s Political Discourses (incorporated into EMP and EMPL) are included as appendices. These are decisions that reflect the contents of the published texts, as they appeared from 1741 to 1777 (1:xxvii–xxviii). Hume wanted My Own Life to be prefaced to the posthumous 1777 edition of ETSS (1:444–45), but his publisher, Strahan, chose to publish it as an independent pamphlet instead. The essays “Of Suicide” and [End Page 297] “Of the Immortality of the Soul” were only briefly intended for publication in Four Dissertations (incorporated into ETSS) and did not appear in the released edition. They, too, only appeared posthumously. The editors project a volume containing Hume’s posthumous writings (1:401n1), which should include these works. Though the essays on suicide and immortality are not included, their history is presented over 1:430–31, importantly supplemented by 1:467–68. The dedication to John Home was published during Hume’s lifetime, though only in his Four Dissertations of 1757. As the editors note (1:695–96) it was highly controversial at the time and historically significant, both as an episode in Hume’s own troubles with the Scottish Kirk, and as an indication of the weakening of the control of the clergy over Scottish culture. It merits inclusion somewhere in a critical edition of Hume’s writings. The obvious place is in the company of the works that originally appeared in Four Dissertations. Those works are distributed over three volumes of the Clarendon Hume editions, those containing the Enquiry concerning Human Understanding, the Dissertation on the Passions, the Natural History of Religion, and EMPL. This raises the question of which volume would be the one a scholar would be most inclined to consult when searching for the dedication. Since the dedication raises the issue of free speech and Hume was in trouble over what he had said with bearing on religion, one appropriate location would be the volume containing the Natural History, as the dedication applauds a one-time Kirk minister who dared to write a tragedy and get it performed on the Edinburgh stage. Another would be in the company of the literary essays that appeared in Four Dissertations: “Of Tragedy” and “Standard of Taste,” which Hume assigned to EMPL. The editors have opted for the latter. Hume’s different editions of his essays were often prefaced with advertisements and notifications. The most famous is the note in the 1777 edition disowning the Treatise. It is rightly excluded from these volumes of the Clarendon Hume because it was directed for insertion in volumes of ETSS that do not contain EMPL.1 The remaining advertisements and notifications are hard to find. They are appended to the introduction to the third part of the emendations/variants (1:529–30...
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