Essays, Moral and Political
Hume's 1741-42 'Essays, Moral and Political' — first major essay collection (later joined with the 1752 Political Discourses)
Tradition: Scottish Enlightenment / British empiricism / political economy / philosophy of politics
Hume's 1741-42 'Essays, Moral and Political' — his first major essay-form intervention in public-philosophical writing
Published in two parts (1741 vol. 1; 1742 vol. 2) and continuously revised through Hume's 1777 death (the definitive edition is the 1777 collected 'Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects'), 'Essays, Moral and Political' is Hume's first major essay collection and the principal vehicle through which contemporary readers encountered Hume. Composed in the years after the catastrophic reception of the Treatise (1739-40 — 'it fell dead-born from the press,' Hume later wrote), the Essays adopt the Addisonian-Spectator essay form — accessible, polished, addressed to the educated general reader rather than the professional philosopher. Across the two volumes (which together contain about thirty-five short essays), Hume treats: the liberty of the press; the rise and progress of the arts and sciences; the original contract (Hume's principal anti-Lockean political-philosophical essay); passive obedience; the standard of taste (the most-cited aesthetic essay); the Protestant succession; party politics; the immortality of the soul (this essay was suppressed before publication and only appeared posthumously); suicide (similarly suppressed); the populousness of ancient nations; and many other topics combining political-philosophical analysis with cultural-historical commentary. The 1752 'Political Discourses' (sometimes treated as Part II of the Essays) added Hume's principal political-economic essays — on money, interest, commerce, the balance of trade — that influenced Adam Smith's 'Wealth of Nations' (1776). Together the Essays form a major eighteenth-century body of philosophical-political writing and were the principal vehicle through which contemporary readers encountered Hume — far more widely read than the Treatise or the Enquiries during his lifetime.
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Editions cited
- Essays, Moral and Political (Edinburgh: A. Kincaid, 1741 vol. 1; 1742 vol. 2)
- Subsequent expansions and revisions across 1748, 1753, 1758, 1777
- Definitive collected edition: Essays Moral, Political, and Literary, ed. Eugene F. Miller (Liberty Fund, Indianapolis, 1985; revised 1987)
- Critical context: Duncan Forbes, Hume's Philosophical Politics (Cambridge, 1975); Donald W. Livingston, Hume's Philosophy of Common Life (Chicago, 1984)
School Embodiments
Founding Scottish-Enlightenment essay collection.
"The republic of letters is the natural arena of philosophical-political thought." (Essays, 'Of Essay-Writing' / 'Of the Rise and Progress of the Arts and Sciences')
Classical-liberal political philosophy.
"Of the Liberty of the Press." (Essays, included)
Early statements of political-economic principles (developed further in Political Discourses 1752).
"Of money, of interest, of commerce." (Essays / Political Discourses)
Humean skeptical methodology.
"Sceptical doubts proper to political philosophy." (Essays, on the original contract)
Internal Tensions
The principal vehicle through which contemporary readers encountered Hume — and the foundation of his fame as essayist before his fame as philosopher. The political-economic essays (collected in 1752 as Political Discourses) directly influenced Adam Smith and the broader Scottish-Enlightenment political economy tradition.
I. Time
1741-42 first editions; continuously revised through 1777. Hume was 30-31 at first publication, 66 at death.
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II. Space
Edinburgh / Ninewells (Hume's family estate). The essays were composed during Hume's transition from the philosophical project of the Treatise to his career as essayist-historian.
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III. Matter
Essay collection (~600 pages in the definitive Liberty Fund edition). Form is essayistic in the Addisonian-Spectator tradition.
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IV. Observer
Middle Hume. The observer is Hume in the post-Treatise period reorienting his philosophical project toward the broader educated public.
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V. Energy
Public-philosophical essay energies. The essays were Hume's most commercially successful publications and the principal source of his early reputation.
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VI. Information
Multi-essay volume. The standard-of-taste essay, the original-contract essay, and the populousness essay are the most-cited individual entries.
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How Essays, Moral and Political resolves each dilemma
38 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 16 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 19 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 3 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.
6 mainstream positions
Matter · 7 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
What stuff is — fundamental, relational, or appearance.
Observer · 37 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Mind, agency, and the knower's relation to the known.