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David Hume
1711-1776

 
                     Hume carried the empiricism of Locke and George Berkeley to the logical extreme of radical skepticism.
                     He repudiated the possibility of certain knowledge, finding in the mind nothing but a series of sensations,
                     and held that cause-and-effect in the natural world derives solely from the conjunction of two impressions.
                     Hume's skepticism is also evident in his writings on religion, in which he rejected any rational or natural
                     theology. Besides his chief work, A Treatise of Human Nature (1739-40), he wrote Political Discourses
                     (1752), The Natural History of Religion (1755), and a History of England (1754-62) that was, despite
                     errors of fact, the standard work for many years.