George Berkeley : religion and science in the Age of Enlightenment

Bibliographic Information

George Berkeley : religion and science in the Age of Enlightenment

[edited by] Silvia Parigi

(Archives internationales d'histoire des idées = International archives of the history of ideas, 201)

Springer, c2010

  • : cased

Available at  / 11 libraries

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Note

"Most of the essays collected here were presented, in a first version, as contributions to the International Berkeley Conference that took place in Gaeta (Italy) in September 2007"--Acknowledgments

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

George Berkeley was considered "the most engaging and useful man in Ireland in the eighteenth century". This hyperbolic statement refers both to Berkeley's life and thought; in fact, he always considered himself a pioneer called to think and do new things. He was an empiricist well versed in the sciences, an amateur of the mechanical arts, as well as a metaphysician; he was the author of many completely different discoveries, as well as a very active Christian, a zealous bishop and the apostle of the Bermuda project. The essays collected in this volume, written by some leading scholars, aim to reconstruct the complexity of Berkeley's figure, without selecting "major" works, nor searching for "coherence" at any cost. They will focus on different aspects of Berkeley's thought, showing their intersections; they will explore the important contributions he gave to various scientific disciplines, as well as to the eighteenth-century philosophical and theological debate. They will highlight the wide influence that his presently most neglected or puzzling books had at the time; they will refuse any anachronistical trial of Berkeley's thought, judged from a contemporary point of view.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: Berkeley's Philosophy between the Analytics and the Historians: beyond the "Standard Interpretation". Part I: Interpretations of Berkeley's Philosophy. How Berkeley's Works Are Interpreted, S.H. Daniel, Berkeley's Metaphysical Instrumentalism, M.A. Hight
  • Causation, Fictionalism and Non-Cognitivism: Berkeley and Hume, P.J.E. Kail
  • Berkeley, The Space of Our Lives, and the Space of Physics, R. Brook. Part II: Neglected Works and Aspects of Berkeley's Thought. Berkeley and His Contemporaries: the Question of Mathematical Formalism, C. Schwartz
  • Locke, Berkeley and Hume as Philosophers of Money: An Apology and Synopsis, C.G. Caffentzis
  • Berkeley and Chemistry in the Siris: the Rebuilding of a Non-Existent Theory, L. Peterschmitt
  • Berkeley and Newton on Gravity in Siris, T. Airaksinen
  • "Scire per causas" vs. "scire per signa": Berkeley and Scientific Explanation in Siris, S. Parigi. Part III: Towards a Wider Historical Perspective. Berkeley, Theology and Bible Scholarship, D. Bertini
  • The Distrustful Philosopher: Berkeley between the Devils and the Deep Blue Sea of Faith, D. Berman
  • Berkeley, Spinoza and Radical Enlightenment, G. Brykman
  • Was Berkeley a Spinozist? An Historiographical Answer (1718-1751), C. Menichelli
  • The Animal According to Berkeley, S. Charles

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