@misc{Lexicon of Arguments, title = {Quotation from: Lexicon of Arguments – Concepts - Ed. Martin Schulz, 29 Mar 2024}, author = {Hume,David}, subject = {Sensory Impressions}, note = {I 20 Impression/Hume: an impression forms the mind in different ways to build the subject. Interior impression: is self-perception. HumeVsRepresentation: the association conditions cannot represent. Rationalism/Deleuze: rationalism had abandoned this insight. (But Hume is not entirely VsRepresentation.) >Mind/Hume, cf. >Self-knowledge, >Self-identification, >Self-consciousness, >Rationalism. I 106 Impression/sensation/Hume: an impression represents nothing, because nothing precedes it. >Representation, >Sensation. I 141 Sensation/impression/Hume: problem: a sensation cannot explain why this impression and not another was selected. ((s) Because nature (or the perceptual world) is not just opposed to the subject and imposes itself, but is partly constituted by the subject.) I 142 Solution: progress: searches the inventory and selects in a constitutive manner. I 147 There are two ways: The first way directs the mind to pleasure/displeasure. The second way directs the mind to the idea of the object, which it constituted itself. >Idea/Hume.},