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Love Quote by David Hume

"To hate, to love, to think, to feel, to see; all this is nothing but to perceive"

About this Quote

Hume collapses the whole melodrama of the inner life into a single, almost deflationary verb: perceive. Hate and love sound like grand, self-authenticating forces; thinking and feeling like separate faculties with their own prestige. Hume treats them as variations on one basic operation, stripping the mind of its supposed hidden engine room. The intent is polemical: to push back against the idea that behind experience there sits a stable “self” or a special rational soul doing the driving. What you call your deepest convictions are, in his picture, just particular ways impressions and ideas show up to you.

The subtext is bracingly anti-mystical. If every mental act is perception, then reason doesn’t reign above the senses; it rides on them. Emotion isn’t an irrational invader either; it’s part of the same stream. The line’s quiet provocation is ethical as much as epistemological: if our mental life is a sequence of perceptions, then certainty, moral outrage, even identity lose their sacred aura. They become phenomena to examine, not monuments to defend.

Context matters. Hume writes in the high Enlightenment, when philosophers were busy building systems that could guarantee knowledge, religion, and morality on firm foundations. He answers with empiricism and a kind of stylish skepticism: no innate ideas, no metaphysical shortcuts, no privileged access to a “real” self behind appearances. The sentence works because it sounds like simplification but functions like a crowbar, prying apart assumptions the reader didn’t realize were holding their worldview together.

Quote Details

TopicDeep
Source
Verified source: A Treatise of Human Nature (David Hume, 1739)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
To hate, to love, to think, to feel, to see; all this is nothing but to perceive. (Book I, Part II, Section VI (T 1.2.6.7; SBN 67)). This sentence appears in Hume’s own text in Book I (Of the Understanding), Part II, Section VI, titled “Of the idea of existence, and of external existence.” The Hume Texts Online edition gives the standard scholarly cross-reference as T 1.2.6.7, with Selby-Bigge/Nidditch pagination SBN 67. The Treatise was first published in 1739 (Book I).
Other candidates (1)
A Treatise on Human Nature (David Hume, 1874) compilation95.0%
... David Hume Thomas Hill Green, Thomas Hodge Grose. VI . resembling some object with respect to its existence ... T...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Hume, David. (2026, February 14). To hate, to love, to think, to feel, to see; all this is nothing but to perceive. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-hate-to-love-to-think-to-feel-to-see-all-this-86691/

Chicago Style
Hume, David. "To hate, to love, to think, to feel, to see; all this is nothing but to perceive." FixQuotes. February 14, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-hate-to-love-to-think-to-feel-to-see-all-this-86691/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"To hate, to love, to think, to feel, to see; all this is nothing but to perceive." FixQuotes, 14 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-hate-to-love-to-think-to-feel-to-see-all-this-86691/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

David Hume

David Hume (May 7, 1711 - August 25, 1776) was a Philosopher from Scotland.

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