David Hume on the Limits of Reason
Enquiry Concerning the Human Understanding, section vii, part i.
Though the chain of arguments... were ever so logical, there must arise
a strong suspicion, if not an absolute assurance, that it has carried
us quite beyond the reach of our faculties, when it leads to
conclusions so extraordinary, and so remote from common life and
experience. We are got into fairy land, long ere we have reached the
last steps of our theory; and there we have no reason to trust our
common methods of argument, or to think that our usual analogies and
probabilities have any authority. Our line is too short to fathom such
abysses.
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