Berkeley and Cognition

Philosophy 56 (216):213 - 221 (1981)
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Abstract

In ‘Berkeley and God’, Jonathan Bennett diagnoses Berkeley's intermittent advocacy of the proposition that physical things ‘do sometimes exist when not perceived by any human spirit’ by pinning on him the invalid argument, vitiated by the ambiguity of ‘depend’, from all ideas depend on some spirit or other, via some sensible ideas do not depend on these spirits themselves, to some ideas depend on non-finite spirits

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Mark Glouberman
Kwantlen Polytechnic University

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References found in this work

Berkeley's God does not perceive.George H. Thomas - 1976 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 14 (2):163-168.
Berkeley and the Tree in the Quad.E. J. Furlong - 1966 - Philosophy 41 (156):169 - 173.

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