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PHIL 305/POLS 370 Notes #5 Page 1 George Berkeley (1685-1753) 1. Berkeley (pr. BARK-lee) was an Irish bishop and philosopher his best-known books are: A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge (1710), which presents his epistemological and ontological theories Three Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous (1713), three debates between a character representing “matter” (in Greek, hyle) and a “lover of mind” (in Greek, philo + nous) Berkeley’s philosophy is a combination of ontological idealism and epistemological empiricism ontological idealism is the theory that reality consists of conceptual patterns rather than material stuff Berkeley’s ontological idealism is sometimes called immaterialism, which is the theory that matter does not exist he said matter cannot be the cause of anything because, if it existed, it would be passive, so it cannot possibly be the cause of our perceptions according to Berkeley, reality consists only of God’s perceptions, which have no material basis but which do have causal power because creates things by perceiving them as real Berkeley’s theory is captured in the slogan, “to be is to be perceived” (Latin: “esse est percipi”) 2. Berkeley rightly pointed out that we never directly experience material objects; what we directly experience are only our subjective sensations for example, if you perceive a red apple, your mind is never directly in contact with the apple instead, your mind is only in direct contact with visual sensations like redness, and tactile sensations like smoothness and coolness Locke had called these sensations “secondary qualities,” because they exist only in the interaction between objects and our sensory mechanisms Locke also said that objects also have “primary qualities,” like extension and mass, which exist in objects regardless of whether anyone is perceiving them Berkeley rejected Locke’s distinction between primary and secondary qualities and said that all qualities exist only as perceptions 3. materialists say that material objects exist as the stable source of our sensations and that without a material basis, our sensations would be arbitrary and unstable for example, when you look at an apple and then look away, the apple does not disappear because the apple is still there when we look at it again, most of us believe it has what philosophers call a “mind-independent” basis of existence, which is the matter it is made of but Berkeley said that God’s perception, rather than matter, is the basis of existence of the apple: God perceives it; therefore it exists – but it does not exist as a material thing in relation to our minds, the apple has a mind-independent existence – but nothing has a mindindependent existence in relation to God’s mind things persist when we look away from them, not because they are made of matter, but because they endure as the stable perceptions of God PHIL 305/POLS 370 Notes #5 Page 2 4. according to Berkeley, the sensations we experience are not caused by matter; instead they are caused directly by God he said that according to materialists, matter has no casual power because it is purely passive – so, even if it did exist, it could not be the cause of our perceptions he said God does not create materials that cause our perceptions; instead, God creates the patterns of reality directly, simply by perceiving them so when we perceive something, we are directly sharing in the perceptions of God God’s perceptions are stable and exist regardless of whether any humans are currently sharing them therefore, the existence of objective realities is stable: they remain in existence because God’s perception of them continues, even when we turn our attention away 5. Berkeley believed in objective realities; that is, he did not believe that our realities are subjective and belong only to us he said we all share the same reality, which are the objectively real truths that God creates by perceiving them so Berkeley did believe in objective realities, but they consist of conceptual objects, not material objects these conceptual objects are the stable patterns of reality perceived by God when we perceive the stable patterns of reality, we are participating directly in the true perceptions of God according to Berkeley, his theory changed nothing in terms of how the patterns of reality operate or behave red apples are still red; rain still feels wet; the sun is still warm and bright all the laws of science still operate the same way the patterns of reality are orderly and common to all, because they are the stable and orderly perceptions of God 6. there are problems with Berkeley’s theory; for example, he misrepresents the materialism of those like Hobbes, who said motion, and not just matter, is the cause of our sensations but Berkeley was right that we never directly experience the existence of matter because we can only ever directly experience our own sensations the existence of matter is a hypothesis that helps us explain the stability of our perceptions, but there may be other explanations for that stability an alternative explanation is provided by Platonic realism, according to which the truest ideas exist as independent realities in themselves other possibilities are that everything that exists belongs to a universal consciousness, or that everything exists as part of a computer program; these theories are analogous to Berkeley’s PHIL 305/POLS 370 Notes #5 Page 3 7. the theoretical advantage of ontological idealism, including Berkeley’s, is that it avoids the interaction problem that belongs to dualistic theories like those of Descartes this problem is the difficulty of explaining how mental realities and physical realities interact in ontological idealism, there is no interaction problem, because mental realities are the only ones there are Hobbes also avoided the interaction problem by saying there is only one kind of reality however, his materialism does not easily explain the special quality that mental realities seem to have so ontological idealism, even though it may seem counter-intuitive to modern thinkers, does avoid some of the problems of dualism and monistic materialism idealism also has an advantage over materialism in beginning from that which we can directly experience, which is our ideas, rather from matter which we never experience directly