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Is Moral Attraction the Key to Avoiding Berkeleyean Solipsism?

Bishop Berkeley’s philosophy is often characterized as idealist, but this is a hasty generalization and false advertising. It is deeply empirical, grounded in observations about human perception and ...
Peirceverance's user avatar
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is subjective idealism or solipsism debunked because of the existence of "Brain" and "Surprise"? related to mind- body problem

reading this might help you understand my point Idealism, Narrative and the Mind-Brain Relation https://www.jstor.org/stable/44807008 how does someone like Berkeley explain the fact that there is ...
Parsa Fakhar's user avatar
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0 answers
44 views

Did Berkeley change his mind on his latest work "Siris" (1774)?

While studying Bishop Berkeley in depth I have faced some interesting arguments regarding his philosophy is shifted and changed on his later life. The main source of this argument is from his not ...
Wiseman's user avatar
  • 143
-1 votes
1 answer
267 views

How does Berkeley distinguish between illusion and reality and what are his arguments?

Does anyone know that how does he explains the effects of mind altering drugs according to his ideology? For example If God is the master perceiver, Does God also perceive the pink elephant or the ...
Wiseman's user avatar
  • 143
-1 votes
3 answers
195 views

If George Berkeley was an Anglican bishop, how his master arguments can be against biblical teachings which states that matter exists?

We all know that George Berkeley was a bishop.(Bishop of Cloyne of the Anglican Church of Ireland) However, how can a Christian ordained member of the clergy can make arguments against biblical ...
Wiseman's user avatar
  • 143
1 vote
3 answers
191 views

How can this argument by the philosopher Berkeley in favor of idealism be resisted?

I'd like to know how the following argument by George Berkeley can be challenged: (1) If primary qualities cannot be abstracted from secondary qualities, then primary qualities cannot exist apart from ...
Bob Hassan's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
131 views

What does Kant refer to when writing about "dreaming (träumenden) idealism" and "visionary (schwärmenden) idealism"?

In Note III to §13 of the Prolegomena, Kant seems to be answering some critics that have compared his transcendental idealism to the philosophies of Descartes (at least the skeptical part of it) and ...
gsmafra's user avatar
  • 653
0 votes
0 answers
78 views

What exactly is an unthought-of object?

Hello fellow philosophers! I'm currently in the process of reading about George Berkeley's Idealism. At one point, it is mentioned that Berkeley's Master Argument fails due to a conflation of ...
Abraham's user avatar
  • 503
2 votes
0 answers
957 views

Are there any good arguments against Berkeley's immaterialism?

Basically, Berkeley writes that the only things that are real or existing are either (1) the active, perceiving mind or soul, or (2) the passive perceived things. He argues that we can only have ...
Devries's user avatar
  • 31
2 votes
2 answers
203 views

Problems with Other Minds in Idealism

If everything is immaterial and just ideas like Berkeley states then how are ideas and experiences shared among minds to create our common reality? Does God just transmit these ideas to everyone's ...
Gabriel's user avatar
  • 21
12 votes
5 answers
3k views

How does Berkeley justify existence of other minds?

I don't understand how Berkeley justifies existence of other minds in his system. Is it something that he takes for granted? Because, his position seems very close to that of a solipsist except for ...
Non-Being's user avatar
  • 341
1 vote
0 answers
78 views

Subjective idealism of Berkeley and Social reality

If one were to accept immaterialist position that Berkeley takes. how can it explain social reality? From what I understand, Berkeley does not deny existence of physical objects, he says that ...
Non-Being's user avatar
  • 341
2 votes
2 answers
234 views

Is there a special language for expressing subjective idealism?

Subjective idealism is the monistic metaphysical doctrine that only minds and mental contents exist. It entails and is generally identified or associated with immaterialism, the doctrine that material ...
Bob's user avatar
  • 247
6 votes
2 answers
168 views

What is Light in Berkeley's Metaphysics?

What is light before we see it? For Berkeley, everything that has not been perceived doesn't exist, but light needs to exist unperceived before it reaches the eyes. How is this possible in Berkeley'...
Arthur Carneiro's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
280 views

According to Russell, are sense data NOT the only things immediately known, or are they not purely mental?

In Russell's Problems of Philosophy, in refutal Berkeley's argument for idealism -in Russel's words "whatever can be immediately known must be in a mind"- he states: Berkeley was right in ...
user2268997's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
228 views

For Berkeley, how do subjective experiences exist?

In Three Dialogues, Berkeley advances a theory of subjective idealism. Things only exist as experiences of individual consciousnesses. These things are static and themselves unthinking, as they are ...
Canyon's user avatar
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2 votes
2 answers
418 views

Is there an atheistic idealism that rejects noumena but isn't solipsism?

I know of one answered question on a similar subject, but mine is not quite the same thing. Berkeley's idealism holds that to be is to be perceived---nothing can exist, or can be thought to exist, ...
Canyon's user avatar
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2 votes
0 answers
122 views

How does Berkeley's idealism differ from others that might be called idealist

Having read Berkeley's work, I am aware of his theory, and definitely disagree with large parts of it - I would like to know how his idealism compares with that of other philosophers, particularly ...
Maths That Imo's user avatar
5 votes
3 answers
4k views

Objection to Berkeley's Master Argument

The Master Argument (roughly) states that it is not possible for sensible objects to exist without a mind. Now part of Berkeley's Argument goes as follows: Suppose something exists without being ...
user2268997's user avatar
3 votes
2 answers
755 views

Is the difference between logical possibility and physical possibility an argument against Idealism?

In typical sci-fi scenarios, the characters realize that they are living in a simulation, or that everything is a dream, etc....once they notice that the laws of physics don't always hold, or that ...
Alexander S King's user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
465 views

Why do current academics refuse to acknolwedge idealism as viable?

Berkeley is often sited as the "ideal" of idealism. Most of the academic arguments attack his various points, but his finer points seems to escape the academic community. Kant gives some effort in ...
NationWidePants's user avatar
5 votes
3 answers
6k views

How is Kant's transcendental idealism related to Berkeley's subjective idealism?

My understanding is that Berkeley considered the outside world to have no existence at all, and took the statement "It's all in the mind" literally, whereas Kant argued that the outside world exists ...
Alexander S King's user avatar
5 votes
3 answers
310 views

Are consistent solipsists limited to the singular when referencing themselves?

If you are an Idealistic Solipsist, is it not true that you must say "I am a Solipsist." or "I am the Solipsist."? One cannot say "I am one of the Solipsists" for example. Are there other ...
hellyale's user avatar
  • 803
4 votes
1 answer
328 views

Berkeley's idealist view of physical objects

Berkeley sees objects as a set of ideas. His strict view on objects allows for cases like his relativity of perception argument (where a bucket of water can be both warm and cold, one person can find ...
A.Lupin's user avatar
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2 votes
1 answer
337 views

How would Kant defend the concept of the noumenon against Berkeley's charge?

Berkeley asserts that it is meaningless to speak of things-in-themselves that are not subject to human evaluation. Given that, no ampliative judgements can be made by postulating a causal relation ...
duskn's user avatar
  • 405
5 votes
1 answer
471 views

What are the rebuttals (if any) to Berkeley's dismissal of "primary qualities"?

I am rereading Berkeley's Three Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous and am curious about any subsequent works which actively rebut his dismissal of primary qualities. From the first dialogue: Phil. ...
asteri's user avatar
  • 201
6 votes
1 answer
256 views

In which text does Berkeley develop his philosophy of subjective idealism?

A while ago, I asked this question about Borges's philosophical influences, which yielded Berkeley. Reading the wikipedia page on Berkeley, I can see that as far as philosophers go, his philosophy of ...
magnetar's user avatar
  • 517
39 votes
7 answers
5k views

Why has the philosophy of Bishop Berkeley fallen out of favor in academic philosophy?

I studied George Berkeley as an undergraduate, and though I absolutely loved his work and his philosophy, many of my peers, and even some of my professors, found his philosophy wholly unappealing, ...
dimo414's user avatar
  • 1,197