Berkeley: Critical and Interpretive Essays

Capa
Colin Murray Turbayne
U of Minnesota Press, 1982 - 340 páginas

Berkeley was first published in 1982. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions.

In contemporary philosophy the works of George Berkeley are considered models of argumentative discourse; his paradoxes have a further value to teachers because, like Zeno's, they challenge a beginning student to find the submerged fallacy. And as a final, triumphant perversion of Berkeley's intent, his central contribution is still commonly viewed as an argument for skepticism - the very position he tried to refute. This limited approach to Berkeley has obscured his accomplishments in other areas of thought - his account of language, his theories of meaning and reference, his philosophy of science. These subjects and others are taken up in a collection of twenty essays, most of them given at a conference in Newport, Rhode Island, commemorating the 250th anniversary of Berkeley's American sojourn of 1728–31. The essays constitute a broad survey of problems tackled by Berkeley and still of interest to philosophers, as well as topics of historical interest less familiar to modern readers. Its comprehensive scope will make this book appropriate for text use.

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Índice

Berkeley Perception
3
Berkeleys Commitment
22
On Taking Ideas Seriously Désirée Park
35
The Concept of Immediate Perception
48
Microscopes and Philosophical
69
Berkeley and Tymoczko
83
Berkeley on the Limits
95
V
120
Locke Berkeley
174
Berkeleys Idealism Revisited Edwin B Allaire
197
Berkeley and Others on
207
Berkeleys Doctrine of Signs William McGowan
231
Dynamical Implications of Berkeleys
247
Michael Hooker
261
18
273
Phillip Cummins
283

9
127
On Being Embrangled
148
11
159
Turbayne
293
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Colin M. Turbayne was a professor of philosophy at the University of Rochester. He is the author of The Myth of Metaphor and has edited several of Berkeley’s works.

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