Observations placeholder
Hume, David - Memory and the database of facts
Identifier
029319
Type of Spiritual Experience
Background
A description of the experience
Treatise, Bk. I, Part I, Sect. IV.
Were ideas entirely loose and unconnected, chance alone would join them; and it is impossible the same simple ideas should fall regularly into complex ones (as they commonly do), without some bond of union among them, some associating quality, by which one idea naturally introduces another. This uniting principle among ideas is not to be considered as an inseparable connection; for that has been already excluded from the imagination: nor yet are we to conclude, that without it the mind cannot join two ideas; for nothing is more free than that faculty: but we are only to regard it as a gentle force, which commonly prevails, and is the cause why, among other things, languages so nearly correspond to each other; Nature, in a manner, pointing out to everyone those simple ideas, which are most proper to be united into a complex one.
The source of the experience
Hume, DavidConcepts, symbols and science items
Concepts
Database of factsMemory
Memory - the types of model in memory
Memory - traversing the database of facts
Memory and subliminal models
Memory recall