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George Berkeley 16851753

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Title: George Berkeley 16851753


1
George Berkeley (1685-1753)
2
BERKELEYS METAPHYSICAL IDEALISM
  • Berkeley is a metaphysical idealist, or
    immaterialist, regarding the ultimate nature of
    reality. He denies the existence of matter.
  • For Berkeley, the universe consists of minds and
    their ideas. Both minds and ideas are
    immaterial.
  • As reality contains nothing except minds and
    their ideas, and minds and ideas are immaterial,
    there is no such thing as matter or physical
    objects of any kind. In thinking that matter
    exists, both science and common sense are
    mistaken.

3
EXISTENCE I
  • For Berkeley, a thing which exists is either
    something which is perceived, or is the thing
    which does the perceiving. The thing which
    perceives is a mind. That which is perceived is
    either an idea or a cluster of ideas.
  • Objects in the external world like trees and
    stars cannot exist apart from minds which are
    aware of them. Minds are beings which perceive
    and will. Perception is passive while such
    mental operations as willing, imagining, and
    remembering are active.

4
EXISTENCE II
  • Existence for Berkeley then takes two forms 1)
    To exist is to be perceived. This is passive
    existence. An external world object of which a
    mind is aware exists passively. 2) To exist is to
    be a perceiver or agent. That is, a mind. This
    is active existence.
  • According to Berkeley, there is and can be
    nothing which exists which is not either an
    active mind or an object of perception of an
    active mind. And objects of perception consist
    of ideas, and are therefore mental in nature, not
    physical. Since both minds and their ideas are
    immaterial, and these are all the things there
    are, there is no matter in the universe.

5
IDEAS I
  • Berkeley continues the use of idea which we
    have seen to be used by Descartes and Locke. For
    Berkeley, idea is used in a very wide sense to
    include sensations, thoughts, memories, images,
    feelings, and anything which is an object of a
    current act of awareness or knowing something.
  • We typically think of an idea as being attached
    to or a property of some mind. For instance,
    when a person says I have an idea we think that
    the idea is a kind of mental entity, and, as
    such, is mind-dependent. Thus physical objects
    like rocks dont have ideas.

6
IDEAS II
  • Recall that, for Locke, an idea stands for
    whatever is the object of the understanding when
    a person thinks and an idea is whatever it is
    which the mind can be employed about in
    thinking.
  • In his wide use of the term idea, Berkeley
    makes it stand for whatever is an object of
    awareness, or ideas form the data of awareness.
  • This includes sense data. Sense data are ideas
    in Berkeleys sense of idea.
  • By saying that sense data like a patch of yellow
    or a rough surface are ideas, Berkeley ties them
    fundamentally to minds without which they cannot
    exist.

7
IDEAS III
  • For Berkeley, anything known by a mind, in being
    known, is an idea.
  • Berkeley says that ideas come from perceptions of
    external objects - what he calls ideas actually
    imprinted on the senses - things like colors and
    shapes. (Lockes source of ideas in sensation.)
  • We are also aware of ideas when we attend to the
    passions and operations of the mind. (Lockes
    source of ideas in reflection.)
  • Thus emotions and feelings are also ideas. When
    Im happy my happiness is an idea since it is
    something of which I am aware.
  • And objects of mental operations such as memory
    and imagination are also ideas.

8
IDEAS IV
  • Perceptions, emotions, sensations, and thoughts
    of things are ideas which we can grasp which are
    either outside of the mind or inside of it.
  • However, the mind also has the ability to
    generate new ideas through the use of memory and
    imagination. And, as with Locke, the mind does
    this by combining or dividing ideas which it has
    previously perceived.

9
EMPIRICISM AND IDEAS
  • Berkeley is an empiricist, and he agrees with
    Locke that all knowledge depends on experience.
  • But Berkeleys idealism means that, for him, a
    common object like an apple is a collection of
    ideas. This is because what we would call sense
    data - things like colors, and shapes, and
    textures - are ideas in his sense of idea.

10
OBJECTS AND IDEAS
  • Thus, a common external world object like an
    apple is a collection of ideas since it is a
    combination of colors, shapes, textures, smells,
    and tastes. And colors, shapes, textures,
    smells, and tastes are kinds of data of which
    minds are aware, and, as sense data or mind
    data, all of these things are equally ideas for
    Berkeley.
  • For Berkeley, any object like an apple simply is
    a combination of ideas and nothing more.
  • Objects for Berkeley are combinations of ideas
    which we associate with a single object. We take
    a particular collection of ideas to be a single
    object and refer to it with a word like apple.

11
RUSSELL AND BERKELEY
  • You can see here Russells indebtedness to
    Berkeley. For Russell, an external world object
    like a table is a cluster of sense data - things
    like colors, and shapes, and textures which we
    are aware of in perception. These sense data are
    taken to be signs, for Russell, of a physical
    object which causes them.
  • The difference here between Berkeley and Russell
    is that Berkeley refuses to say that the sense
    data or collection of ideas is a sign of matter
    which causes them. For Berkeley, an idea can only
    be a sign of another idea, not of something which
    is not an idea.
  • Berkeley could not be an idealist if he admitted
    that there is a physical cause of the sense data
    or collection of ideas. Objects for Berkeley are
    only collections of ideas and there is no matter
    behind them or supporting them. Berkeley then
    rejects the idea of physical substance.

12
MINDS AND IDEAS
  • There can be no ideas or objects of knowledge
    apart from a mind which is aware of the ideas as
    objects of knowledge.
  • Ideas then for Berkeley depend on minds, and an
    unperceived idea, or an idea of which no mind is
    aware is a contradiction. There is an analytic
    relation between minds and ideas because the
    contradictory of a statement like All ideas are
    ideas of some mind is self-contradictory. That
    is, for Berkeley, to say that Something can
    exist apart from some mind is an absurd,
    self-contradictory assertion.

13
THE KNOWER AND THE KNOWN I
  • My mind, or any mind, which is aware of its ideas
    is a thing distinct from those ideas.
  • That is, myself as a knower and the things I know
    are two different things.
  • That which is perceived is perceived by a mind.
    And that which perceives and that which is
    perceived are two different things.

14
THE EXISTENCE OF EXTERNAL WORLD OBJECTS I
  • Berkeley says that to say that an external world
    object like a table exists means that it is an
    object of perception. I say that the table
    exists because I see it or feel it or both. And
    if the table exists when I am not perceiving it,
    then some other mind must be perceiving it.
  • This must be the case, since to talk of external
    world objects apart from minds is unintelligible.
    External world objects are clusters of ideas
    such as colors, and shapes, and felt textures,
    and all such things have a necessary relation to
    mind.

15
THE EXISTENCE OF EXTERNAL WORLD OBJECTS II
  • To talk about the existence of objects apart from
    mind is to me perfectly unintelligible. Their
    esse is percipi their being is to be perceived,
    nor is it possible that they should have any
    existence out of the minds or thinking things
    which perceive them.
  • As objects are collections of ideas for Berkeley,
    as the existence of an idea consists in being
    perceived, and as perception depends on minds or
    perceivers, there can be no external world
    objects apart from minds.

16
THE KNOWER AND THE KNOWN II
  • Berkeley takes the knower-known relation and
    applies it to the universe at large. It is
    unintelligible to say that something is known
    apart from a knower that knows it.
  • And because external world objects consist of the
    ideas we have of them in perception, and ideas
    cannot exist apart from minds, objects of
    awareness cannot exist apart from the minds which
    are aware of them. Therefore their esse is
    percipi, or their being is to be perceived, and
    they have no being apart from perception.
  • This is Berkeleys idealism.

17
BERKELEYS TABLE I
  • Berkeley asks what we mean or can mean by a
    common object such as a table. When we are aware
    of a table as an object of perception then we are
    aware of it as a number of different colors,
    shapes, textures and so forth - what we see,
    feel, and so forth.
  • That is, we perceive the table to be a collection
    of ideas sense data, and that is all we can
    mean by the table as it is perceived - that it is
    a combination of ideas.

18
BERKELEYS TABLE II
  • All we can mean by the table when we or someone
    else is not perceiving it is what we would
    perceive if we were perceiving the ideas which we
    associate with the table. For Berkeley then, all
    that can be meant by the table is either what
    we do perceive or what we would perceive when the
    table is an object of perception.
  • Apart from this we cant mean anything else at
    all. All that we can mean by the table is
    either a collection of ideas that is being
    perceived or could be perceived, and apart from a
    necessary link to perception we cannot understand
    the table to mean anything at all.

19
BERKELEYS TABLE III
  • Berkeley says that any conception of the absolute
    existence of an object, as a thing in itself
    apart from a relation to a mind, is
    unintelligible.
  • We cant even form the idea of a table apart from
    perception, because all that we can understand by
    the notion is what we perceive or would perceive
    when we are aware of a table. Berkeley says that
    we cant form an abstract conception of a table
    apart from the perceptual ideas we associate with
    it. This is because the table and the cluster of
    perceptions we associate with it are really one
    and the same thing, and so it would be like
    trying to take the object away from itself -
    nothing would be left.

20
BERKELEYS TABLE IV
  • We can imagine the table without its legs or with
    a different color, but we cant take away all the
    ideas or sense data which we associate with the
    table or nothing is left.
  • And we cant conceive of or imagine what an
    object would be apart from all the ideas we
    associate with it. That is, we have to form a
    picture of an object based upon what we can
    perceive, and if we take away all ideas of the
    object in thought or imagination nothing is left.
    Accordingly, we have no conception of the
    object.

21
BERKELEYS TABLE V
  • Try to conceive of what a table would be as an
    object without a color, without a shape, a
    volume, a texture, and so forth, what kind of
    conception can you form? None, according to
    Berkeley, and this seems correct.
  • Even our sophisticated scientific picture of a
    table as billions of subatomic particles whirling
    about in mostly empty space is, apart from pure
    mathematical descriptions, based upon what we
    perceive in ordinary life at the macroscopic
    level.

22
BERKELEYS TABLE VI
  • For Berkeley, there is no table apart from what
    we perceive - no physical object underneath the
    sense data.
  • This is a rejection of physical substance and
    another application of Ockhams razor. If you
    can eliminate the table, as a substantial
    physical object, and if you can prove that
    reality consists of ideas alone and you do not
    need matter, then eliminate it.

23
THE CONCEPTION AND EXISTENCE OF OBJECTS LIKE
TABLES
  • We have been talking about our conception of a
    table as something which is necessarily linked to
    ideas. However, if a table truly exists when I
    am not perceiving it, it is not enough to talk
    about its existence as a cluster of possible
    ideas. If a table exists which I am not
    perceiving, then some other mind must be aware of
    it. Because the table is a cluster of ideas, and
    ideas depend on minds, no table or other external
    world object can exist apart from perception.
  • The essence of objects is to be perceived esse
    est percipi - to be is to be perceived.

24
THE ABSURDITY OF MIND-INDEPENDENT MATTER
  • Most people think that tables go right on
    existing when no one is looking, and that a table
    is a physical object and not a cluster of ideas.
    But Berkeley says that this involves a
    contradiction.
  • The contradiction is that objects like tables are
    only things which we perceive through the senses,
    and that what we perceive through the senses are
    ideas, and ideas depend on minds - no minds no
    ideas.
  • Common objects can only be perceived, that is, we
    can only know of objects like tables in terms of
    what we can perceive. There is no faculty of
    mental intuition by which we know the table as
    something behind or supporting the things which
    we perceive. Therefore, objects like tables just
    consist of what we perceive and nothing more.

25
TO BE IS TO BE PERCEIVED I
  • For Berkeley, no object can exist which is either
    not a mind or is not an idea of which some mind
    is aware. For the external world objects with
    which we are acquainted in perception, this means
    that their being consists in their being
    perceived.
  • And apart from being perceived they can have no
    existence at all. So long as external world
    objects are not actually being perceived by me,
    or do not exist in my mind or that of any other
    created spirit, they must either have no
    existence at all, or else subsist in the mind of
    some Eternal Spirit. God.
  • That external world objects continue to exist
    apart from human or other animal perception
    Berkeley takes to be a proof of Gods existence.

26
TO BE IS TO BE PERCEIVED II
  • For Berkeley, when you or I or anyone else is not
    perceiving an object, if the object continues to
    exist, as Berkeley believes it does, it does so
    as an idea in the mind of God.
  • Nothing exists which is not being perceived, at
    least by God.
  • A thing which does not exist, but which could
    exist, fails to exist because it is not an idea
    in the mind of anyone. That is, it is not being
    perceived.
  • For Berkeley, to be is to be perceived. Here
    perceived is not limited to sense knowledge,
    but includes internal ideas such as objects of
    thought and imagination. Accordingly, perceive
    is used in a wide sense that makes it equivalent
    to to be aware of.

27
PRIMARY AND SECONDARY QUALITIES
  • Primary qualities include extension, shape,
    motion, rest, solidity, and number that is, that
    the length, width, height, speed, and density of
    an object can be measured. Primary qualities
    are normally thought to be mind-independent, and
    thus characteristic of things as they are in
    themselves, that is, as material objects.
  • Secondary qualities are all sensible qualities
    which are not primary, and include colors,
    sounds, tastes, odors, and felt textures.
    Secondary qualities are often thought to be
    mind-dependent in that physics does not tell us
    that the object has a color, but consists of
    atoms which lack color. Color is due to matter
    interacting with minds or brains.

28
BERKELEY ON PRIMARY AND SECONDARY QUALITIES
  • Berkeley says that primary qualities are just as
    mind-dependent as secondary ones. As such, they
    cant be characteristic of matter. And they are
    just as mind-dependent because they too are
    ideas.
  • Even our ideas of primary qualities are ideas,
    and, as such, have a necessary relation to mind.
    Thus the idea of matter as something inert and
    senseless and existing in itself apart from mind
    is a contradictory notion.
  • If primary qualities are mind-dependent, then
    they cannot be characteristics of objects which
    exist whether anyone is aware of them or not.

29
IDEAS ARE PASSIVE I
  • For Berkeley, we passively receive ideas in
    perception. And the very being of an idea
    implies passiveness, since it is impossible for
    an idea, as an idea, to do anything or cause
    anything.
  • There is nothing of power or agency in an idea.
    One idea or object of thought then cannot
    produce or make any alteration in another.
  • Berkeley says that anyone who reflects on these
    points can see for himself that they are true.

30
IDEAS ARE PASSIVE II
  • When we perceive the ideas or sense data we take
    to be a table, we see just the ideas as passive
    any color, shape, and so forth is simply
    presented to perception with no sense of power or
    activity in them. But what about the power of
    the table to support a lamp?
  • According to Berkeley, we dont see the power as
    something itself, we just see the table
    supporting the lamp.
  • Similarly, we can see the color of the flame from
    a burner on the stove and can feel its heat -
    each of which is an idea - but we cant similarly
    perceive the flames capacity to boil water. All
    we can perceive is that when the flame heats a
    pot of water it boils. We can see the flame and
    the boiling water, but we cant see the power of
    the flame to make the water boil.

31
IDEAS ARE PASSIVE III
  • So when we say that the flame makes the water
    boil, we are asserting more than we can perceive.
    This is because all we can perceive is the flame
    and the water boiling, and we cant see the power
    of the flame to make the water boil.
  • Here Berkeley is talking about our lack of
    ability to perceive causal connections between
    things in addition to simply perceiving the
    things themselves. This is a point which Hume
    takes over from Berkeley.

32
MIND, UNDERSTANDING, AND WILL
  • Berkeley A spirit mind is one simple,
    undivided, active being - as it perceives ideas
    it is called the understanding, and as it
    produces or acts on ideas it is called the will.
  • So, for Berkeley, a spirit or mind is a mental
    substance with the two aspects of understanding
    and will. However, we cant have any idea of the
    mind as active since all ideas are passive.
    Accordingly, the mind as active cannot itself be
    perceived, and can only be known through its
    effects.

33
THE CAUSE OF IDEAS I
  • Berkeley notes that we perceive a continual
    succession of ideas. (This continual succession
    of ideas which Berkeley says we see in the
    external world is taken over by Hume in his talk
    of the self as consisting of just a continuous
    series of perceptions.)
  • Now Berkeley notes that there must be a cause of
    this succession of ideas since we do not cause
    the external world objects which we perceive.
    And that cause cannot itself be an idea or a
    combination of ideas like a table - weve just
    seen that causes cant be seen.

34
THE CAUSE OF IDEAS II
  • A person has some power over his own thoughts,
    but has no power over what objects ideas the
    person perceives in the external world. The
    cause of our ideas of external world objects then
    has to be some immaterial active substance or
    spirit other than ourselves.
  • The cause of our ideas of external world objects
    cant be physical because Berkeley takes it to be
    proved that there is no such thing as matter. In
    addition, ideas are passive and so cant be
    causes which are active.
  • The cause of our ideas sense data of external
    world objects is God. And for Berkeley we can
    know that God exists as the cause of these ideas.
    Such things as we perceive in nature, and the
    regularity of nature that is described by the
    laws of science, are due to God.

35
BERKELEY AND REALISM I
  • Recall that realism regarding external world is
    the position that objects do not depend on
    awareness of them for their existence. Or
    realism is the position that at least some kinds
    of object sometimes exist without being
    perceived. Such objects can be described as
    being mind-independent. Berkeley is not a
    realist in this sense.

36
BERKELEY AND REALISM II
  • However, Berkeley does maintain that external
    world objects can exist apart from human
    perception. External world objects for Berkeley
    are clusters of ideas, and they can exist as
    ideas as long as some mind is aware of them. The
    mind which is aware of things like mountains, and
    stones, and stars when no earthly mind is aware
    of them is God.
  • Thus Berkeley denies realism as an assertion of
    the possibility of mind-independent objects, but
    says that objects do exist independently of our
    awareness.

37
CONSIDERATIONS OF BERKELEIAN IDEALISM I
  • Recall that Berkeley follows Locke in saying that
    the data of awareness is ideas, and that ideas
    are mind-dependent. Since any object is either a
    simple or complex idea, and ideas are
    mind-dependent, then there can be no such thing
    as a mind-independent object.
  • But do we have to say that that of which we are
    aware when we are aware is an idea or group of
    ideas? Does Berkeleys position just follow from
    a point of terminology? That is, by saying that
    what we are aware of when we are aware is an idea
    or set of ideas it follows that everything is
    mind-dependent?

38
CONSIDERATIONS OF BERKELEIAN IDEALISM II
  • Berkeleys argument might be said to have the
    following form 1) Objects of awareness depend on
    awareness or there can be no object of awareness
    apart from things that are aware. 2) Things that
    are aware are minds, and minds are immaterial.
    3) Objects of awareness, in depending on
    immaterial minds which are aware of them, are
    themselves immaterial. These are Berkeleys
    ideas. 4) We can conceive of no object apart
    from the ideas we associate with it. Take away
    the ideas and you take away the object. 5) This
    then seems to leave no room in the universe for
    mind-independent matter.

39
CONSIDERATIONS OF BERKELEIAN IDEALISM III
  • The first point, that objects of awareness are
    dependent on awareness is simply logical, and so
    can be accepted. However, a materialist like
    Taylor would not accept the second point that
    anything which perceives or is conscious is
    thereby necessarily immaterial. A materialist or
    even a dualist would also not accept the third
    point that objects of awareness must be
    immaterial, or need not conceive that an object
    of awareness is an idea and therefore immaterial.
    Why assume that a mind or brain cannot be
    conscious of matter?

40
CONSIDERATIONS OF BERKELEIAN IDEALISM IV
  • Point four would not be accepted by Russell or
    any scientific realist, since it is conceivable
    that we can work with mathematical descriptions
    of subatomic particles quite successfully, and
    so, even when we have subtracted the primary and
    secondary qualities of an object of which we are
    aware in perception, something remains which can
    fulfill our concept of matter.
  • Thus it would not seem to follow that everything
    is necessarily immaterial as Berkeley supposes.
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