Modern Philosophy PHIL320

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Descartes’ rationalism
Advertisements

Descartes’ trademark argument Michael Lacewing
René Descartes ( ). The popular version of Descartes.
Meditations on First Philosophy
Berkeley’s idealism (brief)
LECTURE 9 BISHOP BERKELEY PRIMARY AND SECONDARY QUALITIES & THE “CONCEIVABILITY” ARGUMENT.
Or Is your science safe? Virtue: Tentative Skepticism Deductive reason & Maths Vice: unsupportable intuitions that provide foundations of deduction.
LOCKE’S CAUSAL THEORY OF PERCEPTION
Descartes on Certainty (and Doubt)
The Rationalists: Descartes Certainty: Self and God
Berkeley’s Empirical Idealism Copyright, 1996 © Dale Carnegie & Associates, Inc.
LOCKE 2 An Argument that the External World [the world outside the mind] Exists.
BERKELEY 1 paragraphs 1-21 THE EXTERNAL WORLD IS UNNECESSARY AND IMPOSSIBLE.
What is Practical Philosophy? Dennis Blejer School of Practical Philosophy, Boston 5 April 2008.
Socrates ( BCE) and Plato ( BCE). The Philosophy of Socrates “ The unexamined life is not worth living. ” Wisdom: knowing that you know.
Philosophy of Mind Week 3: Objections to Dualism Logical Behaviorism
Modern Philosophers Rationalists –Descartes –Spinoza –Leibniz Empiricists –Locke –Berkeley –Hume Epistemology - the theory of knowledge (what and how we.
1 Philosophy of Mind I. Introduction II. Ontological Issues.
BERKELEY’S CASE FOR IDEALISM (Part 2 of 2)
Chapter 8 HUME. How does the mind/body problem reveal a partial incoherence within Cartesian metaphysics? In what ways does David Hume turn away from.
Matter is Not the Object of Our Perceptions (1)Sensible things are just those that are perceived by the senses. (2)The senses perceive nothing that they.
9/21/2015 Modern Philosophy PHIL320 1 Spinoza – Ethics Five Charles Manekin.
Is there any life after death? Circle the statements you agree with. Explain what you believe about life after death. **What don’t you believe ? Why not?
BERKELEY’S CASE FOR IDEALISM (Part 1 of 2) Text source: A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge, sectns. 1-21,
René Descartes ( AD) Meditations on First Philosophy (1641) (Text, pp )
Descartes and Buddies “To be or not to be, that is the question”
A: No principles are innate 1.Everyone would have to know innate principles, but there is no such thing as a principle which everyone knows. 2.Even “Nothing.
Metaphysics in Early Modern Philosophy. The Atomic Theory of Matter The atomic theory poses a challenge to theories of substances or objects Atomic theory:
The Turn to the Science The problem with substance dualism is that, given what we know about how the world works, it is hard to take it seriously as a.
Berkeley’s Three Dialogues Is there material substance? Does the belief in material substance lead to skepticism?
Modern Philosophy Part Three.
After the first dialogue, Hylas admits, he is a skeptic—but so are you, he says to Philonous Phil: Not so! Skepticism only follows if you start by assuming.
Introduction to Philosophy Lecture 1-a What is philosophy? By David Kelsey.
The importance of Catholic Philosophy. What is Philosophy? Philosophy is an exploration of the most basic questions man’s reason can ask. These include:
1/9/2016 Modern Philosophy PHIL320 1 Kant II Charles Manekin.
1/19/2016 Modern Philosophy PHIL320 1 Spinoza – Ethics Two Charles Manekin.
An analysis of Kant’s argument against the Cartesian skeptic in his ‘Refutation of Idealism” Note: Audio links to youtube are found on my blog at matthewnevius.wordpress.com.
An Outline of Descartes's Meditations on First Philosophy
Revision Notes Courtesy of Mr Dixon. Instructions This PowerPoint has all the information you need to complete your Revision Booklets for the Science.
Timeline of European History Ancient Medieval Modern History History History History History History (Middle Ages or Dark Ages) (Middle Ages or Dark Ages)
Lesson Objective: Lesson Outcomes: Lesson Objective: Lesson Outcomes: Mr M Banner 2016 Grade 12 th May 2016 Starter: What does Cosmology mean to you? Title:
Scientific Realism: Appearance and Reality Reality what a concept Ian Hacking.
1. I exist, because I think. 2. I am a thinking thing 3
Introduction to Philosophy Plato’s Republic Greek Philosophy Socrates Socratic Method: Admit ignorance. Never rely on tradition. Continuously question.
Ryle’s philosophical behaviourism
Meditation Six Of God: That He Exists.
Knowledge Empiricism 2.
Hume’s Fork A priori/ A posteriori Empiricism/ Rationalism
The Trademark Argument and Cogito Criticisms
Sensible Qualities Things like heat ARE qualities that are subjective. These are secondary qualities. Everyone agrees that secondary qualities DO have.
Indirect Realism Understand the argument put forward by the indirect realist. Explain how a indirect realist would respond to perceptual problems. ‘Does.
Descartes’ trademark argument
Michael Lacewing Berkeley’s idealism Michael Lacewing © Michael Lacewing.
Descartes’ proof of the external world
Descartes, Meditations 1 and 2
Major Periods of Western Philosophy
Irish bishop and philosopher
Issues in bioethics Is there “objective truth” in ethics? By
Issues in bioethics Is there “objective truth” in ethics? By
Modern Philosophy PHIL320
Recap So Far: Direct Realism
Descartes -- Meditations Four
Descartes -- Meditations One
Do we directly perceive objects? (25 marks)
Problems with IDR Before the holidays we discussed two problems with the indirect realist view. If we can’t perceive the external world directly (because.
What keywords / terms have we used so far
Starter Task Briefly outline the master argument as given by Berkeley.
Modern Philosophy PHIL320
Descartes -- Meditations Three
Modern Philosophy PHIL320
Presentation transcript:

Modern Philosophy PHIL320 Berkeley – Principles 1 Charles Manekin 11/18/2018 Modern Philosophy PHIL320

Modern Philosophy PHIL320 Topics of Discussion Objections to Immaterialism The Religious Significance of the Doctrine. Arguments against Absolute Time and Space 11/18/2018 Modern Philosophy PHIL320

Objections and Replies How can we distinguish between dreaming or imagining and sensing? Sensing is not dependent upon my will. Vividness of perception in sensing Haven’t you eliminated the real world? No, I have eliminated matter. Isn’t real fire different from imagined fire? Isn’t real pain different from imagined pain? 11/18/2018 Modern Philosophy PHIL320

Objections and Replies We see things at a difference? Strictly speaking, we do not observe distance. Things are constantly popping in and out of existence. What about colors, and what’s wrong with continual creation? What about the perceiver who neither slumbers nor sleeps? 11/18/2018 Modern Philosophy PHIL320

Objections and Replies If figure and extension exist in the mind, doesn’t that make the mind shaped? Nah! What about the new mechanical theories of corpuscular motion? Are atoms observable? But we say that fire causes heat We also say that the sun rises. 11/18/2018 Modern Philosophy PHIL320

Berkeley as the Ally of Common Sense Philosophy gets people into trouble, and a misuse of language gets philosophy into trouble. Demonstration of the immateriality of God, or the natural immortality of the soul. Deep religious overtones of the philosophy 11/18/2018 Modern Philosophy PHIL320

The Attack on Abstract Ideas The Lockean Explanation of the Process of Abstraction “Does it not require some pains and skill to form the general idea of a triangle...for it must be neither oblique nor rectangle, neither equilateral, equicural, nor scalenon, but all and none of these at once. In effect it is something imperfect that cannot exist, an idea wherein some part of several different and inconsistent ideas are put together. Berkeley -- Ideas are general, not abstract 11/18/2018 Modern Philosophy PHIL320

The Attack on Abstract Ideas The Medieval Background of all this The problem is one of language, and the idea that general nouns name abstract ideas. ..."Whereas in truth there is no such thing as one precise and definite signification annexed to any general name, they all signifying indifferently a great number of particular ideas. Philosophical controversies dismissed as “merely verbal” 11/18/2018 Modern Philosophy PHIL320

What are the objects of human knowledge? Either the ideas actually imprinted on the senses; or else such as are perceived by attending to the passions and operations of the mind. In addition, there are the perceivers, i.e., mind, spirit, soul, self. 11/18/2018 Modern Philosophy PHIL320

Objections and Replies Everybody believes that matter exists independently. Everybody believes that colors exist independently. But this abolishes science. What about unperceived things, such as the earth moving around the sun? We still can rely on astronomers What about the inner workings of nature? 11/18/2018 Modern Philosophy PHIL320