Particles and ideas : Bishop Berkeley's corpuscularian philosophy

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Particles and ideas : Bishop Berkeley's corpuscularian philosophy

Gabriel Moked

Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 1988

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Note

Based on the author's thesis (doctoral)--Oxford, 1969-71

Bibliography: p. [234]-240

Includes indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The aim of this book is to show that Bishop Berkeley (1685-1753) developed a highly original brand of corpuscularian physics. Berkeley is usually considered mainly as the creator of immaterialistic philosophy which rejects the very concept of matter and the existence of unperceived particles. However, Moked shows that in Berkeley's last major publication ("Siris", 1744) he was completely converted to the belief in the usefulness of the concept of, and even in the existence of minute particles.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction. Part 1: Corpuscularianism and inductivism in the "Principles of human knowledge" and "Three dialogues between Hylas and Philonous". Part 2 "Siris" (I) - particles as theoretical entities assumed in hypotheses: including the Bishop's aether and Newton's hypothesis of aether in "Opticks", the anti-Cartesian trend and Berkeley's defence of empty space. Part 3: "Siris" (II) - particles as undoubtedly real. Part 4: "Siris" (III) - particles as of old. Appendices: 1 - Berkeley's early atomism as expounded in his theory of "Minima"
  • 2 - did Popper misunderstand Berkeley? 3 - the corpuscularian index of "Siris"
  • 4 - index of references to "Minima" in the "Philosophical commentaries"
  • 5 - the "Minima"-theory and the corpuscularian theories in "Siris". Notes. Bibliography. Index.

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