Language and the Structure of Berkeley's World

Dissertation, University of Southern California (2014)
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Abstract

Berkeley's philosophy is meant to be a defense of commonsense. However, Berkeley's claim that the ultimate constituents of physical reality are fleeting, causally passive ideas appears to be radically at odds with commonsense. In particular, such a theory seems unable to account for the robust structure which commonsense (and Newtonian physics) takes the world to exhibit. The problem of structure, as I understand it, includes the problem of how qualities can be grouped by their co-occurrence in a single enduring object and how these enduring objects can bear spatiotemporal, causal, and other relations to one another. I argue that Berkeley's solution to these problems lies in his views about language. At one level, human language allows us to exploit patterns in our perceptions to construct a highly structured representation of the physical world which allows us to make accurate predictions at minimal cognitive expense. At a deeper level, these patterns occur in perception because our perceptions themselves form a language in which God speaks to us.

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Author's Profile

Kenneth L. Pearce
James Madison University

References found in this work

Abstraction, relation, and induction.Julius Rudolph Weinberg - 1965 - Madison, WI, USA: University of Wisconsin Press.
The Journal of the History of Philosophy: What It All Means.Richard A. Watson - 2012 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 50 (1):1-5.

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