A note on research approach-decomposing on Hume’s view on inductive reasoning
Highlight 5 main ideas of David Hume's view on inductive reasoning and describe 2 claims of his view in terms of Toulmin's model of arguments
David Hume’s view on inductive reasoning centers on
the claim that induction is not justified by pure reason, but by habit or
custom formed from repeated experience. In Toulmin’s terms, Hume’s view can be
restated as arguments whose claims depend on empirical
regularity rather than logical certainty.
Five main ideas
1.
Induction goes
beyond what is logically guaranteed.
We move from observed cases to unobserved cases, but the conclusion is not
deductively certain.
2.
The future is
assumed to resemble the past.
Inductive reasoning presupposes the uniformity of nature, meaning similar
causes will produce similar effects.
3.
Reason alone
cannot justify induction.
Hume argues that no a priori argument can prove that the future must match past
experience.
4.
Experience is the
source of causal inference.
We infer one event from another because repeated conjunctions in experience
train the mind to expect a connection.
5.
Habit or custom
explains inductive belief.
The mind naturally forms expectations after repetition, so induction works
psychologically even if it lacks rational certainty.
Two claims in Toulmin terms
|
Humean
claim |
Toulmin’s
claim |
Grounds |
Warrant |
||||
|
Humean
claim |
Toulmin’s
claim |
Grounds |
Warrant |
||||
|
Past regularities justify
expecting future regularities. |
“The future will resemble
the past in this case.” |
Repeated observations show
constant conjunction between similar causes and effects. |
If a pattern has held
repeatedly in experience, it is reasonable to project it forward. |
||||
|
Causal inference is based on
experience, not pure reason. |
“We can infer one object
from another only through experience.” |
No contradiction arises if
nature changes, so logic alone cannot prove the inference. |
If no deductive proof is
possible, then the inference must rest on observed habit and experiential
support. |
||||
How to use this in class
A simple way to
present Hume is: induction is useful, but it is not logically certain;
it works because repeated experience creates expectation. In Toulmin language,
Hume challenges any claim that induction has deductive proof and instead
locates its support in experience, habit, and probability.
Clarify
Hume's ideas a bit more with reference to the following MBA research theme:
More involvement of corporate CEOs in promoting their corporate brand could
increase the corporate brand equity in the global luxury product sector.
Hume’s
point becomes clearer in your MBA theme if you treat the CEO-brand relationship
as an inductive claim, not a certainty: past examples of visible CEO leadership
may suggest stronger brand equity, but Hume would say that does not logically
guarantee the same outcome in every luxury firm or market. The most Humean
version of your topic is: “CEO involvement often seems to help brand equity
because we have seen it do so before, but the conclusion remains probable, not
necessary.”
Hume applied to your topic
For
Hume, the core issue is that your claim depends on moving from observed cases
to an unobserved future case. In your theme, that means inferring that because
CEO involvement has coincided with stronger branding in some luxury companies,
it will therefore increase brand equity in other luxury firms too. Hume would
accept that this is how business reasoning normally works, but he would warn
that the inference rests on habit and past regularity, not on deductive proof.
What this
means for the MBA theme
Your
research theme is basically an inductive proposition: “More CEO involvement
could increase corporate brand equity in the global luxury product sector.”
Hume would say this is plausible because it is based on repeated experience and
perceived cause-effect patterns, but it still needs empirical support from data
in the luxury sector. He would also remind you that other factors may
intervene, such as market conditions, brand heritage, product quality, or
regional consumer preferences.
Toulmin view of the claim
In
Toulmin terms, the claim is
that more CEO involvement could increase corporate brand equity. The grounds would
be observed cases where CEO visibility, communication, or endorsement coincides
with stronger consumer trust, prestige, or brand awareness in luxury firms. The warrant is
the assumption that visible top leadership strengthens symbolic value and
credibility, which then supports brand equity.
Two Humean
claims in Toulmin form
1. Claim: CEO involvement increases brand equity in luxury
brands.Grounds: Some luxury firms show stronger market perception when the CEO is publicly active in branding.
Warrant: If repeated experience links CEO visibility with stronger brand perception, then future CEO involvement is likely to have the same effect.
Hume would say this warrant is only probable, because it assumes nature and markets will continue to behave as before.
Grounds: Some luxury
firms show stronger market perception when the CEO is publicly active in
branding.
Warrant: If repeated
experience links CEO visibility with stronger brand perception, then future CEO
involvement is likely to have the same effect.
Hume would say this warrant is only probable, because it assumes nature and
markets will continue to behave as before.
2. Claim: Past success of CEO-led branding justifies future
confidence in the same strategy.
Grounds: Historical
examples suggest that strong executive storytelling can enhance prestige and
customer trust.
Warrant: What has
worked repeatedly in the past will probably work again under similar conditions.
Hume would challenge this as a rational necessity and treat it instead as a
habit-based expectation that must be tested against new evidence.
How to phrase it in research
A
more Hume-compatible research statement would be: “CEO involvement is
hypothesized to be positively associated with corporate brand equity in the
global luxury product sector, subject to empirical verification.” That wording
fits Hume because it avoids claiming certainty and instead presents the
relationship as an inductive hypothesis. In other words, Hume would push you
from “this must be true” to “this is a reasoned expectation that needs
evidence.”
References
·
Hume, D. (2000) An Enquiry concerning Human
Understanding. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
·
Norton, J.D. (2003) ‘A material theory of induction’, Philosophy of Science, 70(4),
pp. 647-670.
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