"A carefully crafted and detailed examination of some problems in Humes philosophy that have not received the attention they deserve. Falkenstein has provided an exacting analysis of the various relations between time, space and the mind in Humes philosophy, a gift to Hume scholarship."
Wade Robison, Rochester Institute of Technology, USA
"This book is an original, deep, and unfailingly valuable interpretation and interrogation of central aspects of Humes epistemology, metaphysics, and philosophy of mind. It merits and rewards close study."
Don Garrett, New York University, USA
"Falkensteins terrific book is a study of central themes of Humes theoretical philosophy, with due focus on the Treatise and first Enquiry. The book displays a remarkable combination of breadth and depth. While the discussion includes a wide range of topics, such as belief, identity, space and time, the metaphysics of mind, and skepticism, Falkensteins consideration of each is exacting and detailed. Another virtue of the book is its rigorous and illuminating interrogations of Humes positions and arguments. It is a major contribution to the study of Humes philosophy, and every scholar of eighteenth-century metaphysics and epistemology would benefit from engaging with it."
Bridger Ehli, Indiana University Bloomington, USA"Falkenstein discusses space, time, objectivity, consciousness, and skepticism. The attention to these deep issues of perennial philosophy and the mining of Humes arguments in rich historical context to find ways to address them, makes this book an important contribution to philosophy, to early modern Western scholarship, and to Hume scholarship."
Donald L. M. Baxter, University of Connecticut, USA