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No book could be more indebted to another than mine is to Louis Loeb’s Stability and Justification in Hume’s Treatise. His book more than any other sets the problems of Hume interpretation I address and the standards for solving them I aspire to meet. Louis was my most influential teacher of history of philosophy, and his work has inspired my sporadic efforts in the history of philosophy for decades. I am also indebted to him for reading a manuscript of the book yet more sprawling than the present product, finding the value in it, making copious comments on almost all chapters, and rooting out countless errors, both forgivable and absurd. I can only hope that I have earned the right to disagree with him where I do.
My debt to the work of David Owen will be visible on every page of the book. I did not grasp the extent to which Hume focuses on the psychology of inference in Book 1 of the Treatise until I read Hume’s Reason. Without the lessons of that book, my effort here would have been impossible.
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