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Language and the Structure of Berkeley's World

Full title: Language and the Structure of Berkeley's World
ISBN: 9780198790334
ISBN 10: 0198790333
Authors: Pearce, Kenneth L.
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Edition: Illustrated
Num. pages: 240
Binding: Hardcover
Language: en
Published on: 2017

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Synopsis

According To George Berkeley (1685-1753), There Is Fundamentally Nothing In The World But Minds And Their Ideas. Surprisingly, Berkeley Tries To Sell This Idealistic Philosophical System As A Defense Of Common-sense And An Aid To Science. However, Both Common-sense And Newtonian Science Take The Perceived World To Be Highly Structured In A Way That Berkeley's System Does Not Appear To Allow. The Author Of This Book Argues That Berkeley's Solution To This Problem Lies In His Philosophy Of Language. The Solution Works At Two Levels. At The First Level, It Is By Means Of Our Conventions For The Use Of Physical Object Talk That We Impose Structure On The World. At A Deeper Level, The Orderliness Of The World Is Explained By The Fact That, According To Berkeley, The World Itself Is A Discourse 'spoken' By God. The Structure That Our Physical Object Talk Aims To Capture Is The Grammatical Structure Of This Divine Discourse. This Approach Yields Surprising Consequences For Some Of The Most Discussed Issues In Berkeley's Metaphysics. In Berkeley's View, Physical Objects Are Neither Ideas Nor Collections Of Ideas. Kenneth L. Pearce. Includes Bibliographical References (pages 205-214) And Index.