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Presents a concise and comprehensive analysis of George Berkeley's thought and the impact of his intellectual contributions to philosophy
In this latest addition to the Blackwell Great Minds series, noted scholar of early modern philosophy Margaret Atherton examines Berkeley's most influential work and demonstrates the significant conceptual impact of his ideas in metaphysics and the philosophy of religion.
A concise and rigorous primer on Berkeley's essential writings and contributions to modern philosophy
Written by a leading scholar of early modern philosophy
Offers insight into the foundations of modern metaphysical and religious philosophy
Equips readers to find firm footing in Berkeley's wider body of published work in the canon of Western philosophy
Auteur
Margaret Atherton, PhD, is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, where she has been teaching since 1980. She has published numerous articles in the history of early modern philosophy, and has special interests in the works of John Locke and George Berkeley, as well as in the philosophy of perception and the recovery of women philosophers.
Texte du rabat
As one of the leading thinkers of the early modern period, George Berkeley revolutionized metaphysical thought through his arguments in defense of idealismthe belief that there is no reality outside of ideas and minds and thus no material reality. In contrast to his philosophical predecessors and contemporaries, most notably Locke and Descrates, Berkeley refused the more popular notions of materialism and dualism, and in so doing, developed a defense against skepticism as well as one of the most remarkable and enduring arguments for the existence of God. This latest addition to the Blackwell Great Minds series outlines the fundamental principles of Berkeley's highly influential contributions to philosophy, paying particular attention to his most influential works, Principles of Human Knowledge and Three Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous. Noted scholar of early modern philosophy Margaret Atherton conducts a careful and thorough analysis of the logical structures that define Berkeley's metaphysics and underpin his religious philosophy, and articulates the significant conceptual impact of his ideas in the development of these areas of thought. Berkeley's work has influenced great minds from Kant to Hume, and through Atherton's astute analysis and novel contribution to Berkeley scholarship, readers are equipped to find firm footing in his wider body of published work. Designed as a concise, yet rigorous primer on Berkeley's philosophical thought, Berkeley is an evocative intellectual history of the life and ideas of one of the most important thinkers of the early modern period, emphasizing the significance and impact of his work in the history of philosophy.
Contenu
Preface x
Acknowledgments xiii
Abbreviations xiv
1 Berkeley's Life and Work 1
16851713 2
17131734 4
17341753 7
2 An Essay towards a New Theory of Vision 13
Distance Cannot Be Seen of Itself and Immediately 16
We Don't See Distance by Anything Necessarily Connected with It 16
Distance Is Only Suggested to Our Thoughts by Certain Visible Ideas and Sensations Attending Vision 18
What We Learn from the Man Born Blind 18
Heterogeneity, Visible Ideas, and Tangible Meanings 19
Size Perception and the Picture Picture 21
Situation Perception and the Picture Picture 25
The Main Part and Pillar 27
Vision Is a Language 29
3 Principles of Human Knowledge*: *The Introduction 33
Berkeley's Outline of His Project (PHK Introd. 15) 34
Abstract Ideas (PHK Introd. 617) 35
The Abuse of Language (PHK Introd. 1825) 43
4 Principles of Human Knowledge: Berkeley's Summary Statement of his Position (PHK 133) 46
PHK 17: The Statement of Idealism 47
PHK 825: The Refutation of Materialism 54
PHK 2533: Minds and Ideas: Berkeley's Positive Argument 59
5 Principles of Human Knowledge: Berkeley's Replies to Objections (PHK 3484) 67
First Objection (PHK 3440) 68
Second Objection (PHK 41) 69
Third Objection (PHK 4244) 69
Fourth Objection (PHK 4548) 71
Fifth Objection (PHK 49) 73
Sixth Objection (PHK 50) 74
Seventh Objection (PHK 5153) 75
Eighth Objection (PHK 5457)8 75
Tenth Objection (PHK 5859) 77
Eleventh Objection (PHK 6066) 79
Twelfth Objection (PHK 6781) 82
Objections from Religion (PHK 8284) 82
Conclusions 83
6 Principles of Human Knowledge: The Consequences of the Principles (PHK 85156) 86
General Consequences for Knowledge of Ideas (PHK 86100) 87
The Consequences for Knowledge of Natural Philosophy (PHK 101134) 91
Newton on Absolute Space and Motion (PHK 110117) 94
Consequences for Our Knowledge of Mathematics (PHK 118134) 100
Consequences for Knowledge of Spirits (PHK 135156) 106
Consequences for Knowledge of God (PHK 145156) 108
7 Three Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous: The Preface and First Dialogue, 1 171194 114
The Preface 114
First Dialogue, 171194 116
Initial Scene Setting 116
Sensible Things 117
What Is Immediately Perceived 118
To Exist Is One Thing, and to Be Perceived Is Another 122
Heat 123
Further Sensible Qualities 126
Colors 127
The Very Same Arguments 129
Summing Up 131
8 Three Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous: First Dialogue, 2 195207 135
The ActObject Distinction 136
Modes, Qualities, and Substratum 137
The Unconceived Tree (The Master Argument) 138
Without the Mind and At a Distance 139
Two Kinds of Objects 140
The Relationship between the Principles and Three Dialogues 144
9 Three dialogues between Hylas and Philonous: The Second Dialogue 147
A Psychophysical Cause of Ideas 147
The Real Beauties of Nature 148
Ideas Caused by God 150
Matter (and God) as the Cause of Our Ideas 152
What Has Been Achieved in the Second Dialogue 155
10 Three Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous: The Third Dialogue 157
What Philonous Believes 159
An Annihilation Objection 161
Knowledge of Immaterial Substance 162
The Gardener and His Cherry Tree 165 <...