

An edition of A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge (1710)
By Alfred Klemmt,George Berkeley
Publish Date
1928
Publisher
Printed by A. Rhames for J. Pepyat,Open Court Pub. Co.
Language
eng
Pages
148
Description:
In this exceptional work, Berkeley makes the striking claim that physical things consist of nothing but ideas and therefore do not exist outside the mind. This claim establishes him as the founder of the idealist tradition in philosophy. The text printed in the volume is the 1734 edition of the Principles, which represents Berkeley's mature thought. Also included are four important letters between George Berkeley and Samuel Johnson, written between 1799 and 1730. This edition of Berkeley's most famous work provides readers with a thorough introduction to the central ideas of tone of the world's greatest philosophers.
subjects: Idealism, great_books_of_the_western_world, Sociology of Knowledge, Philosophy, Soul, Nonfiction, immaterialism, Theory of Knowledge, Essays, great_books, Kennis, Knowledge, theory of, Philosophy, british, Knowledge, Kennistheorie, Gezond verstand, Théorie de la connaissance, Idéalisme (philosophie), Âme, Aufsatzsammlung, Erkenntnistheorie, Epistemology, Filosofia moderna, Philosophy, modern, 18th century, Early works to 1800