Key argument and brief critique
"It is indeed an opinion strangely prevailing amongst men, that houses, mountains, rivers, and in a word all sensible objects have an existence natural or real, distinct from their being perceived by the understanding. But with how great an assurance and acquiescence soever this principle may be entertained in the world; yet whoever shall find in his heart to call it in question, may, if I mistake not, perceive it to involve a manifest contradiction. For what are the forementioned objects but the things we perceive by sense, and what do we perceive besides our own ideas or sensations; and is it not plainly repugnant that any one of these or any combination of them should exist unperceived?" - Bishop George Berekely ref; http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/berkeley/#2.1.1
Berkeley in no way, denied the existence of the tangible 'object' but of the ontological "object" posit, at least to the extent that that postulate could be sufficiently supported by human perception.
Berkeley's fear, and project, was to diminish the approach of "new science" and its assumed condition of paradigmatic rationale, as a non-sensory, reality posit. This opinionatedness, that is, that rationale could spring forth from an entirely spontaneous source, both unimpaired and encumbered by an embodied subject mind, was flawed to the extent of causal collapse; it could not be established beyond sensory subjective speculation. This limitation made the determination of pure rationale simply another subject conjecture, another form of empiricism, rather than a well-spring of indivisible essence. Truth claims, propositionally contingent to mindful genealogy were the advance of theology, not science, according to Berkeley.
He saw the advance of scientific thinking, and its proponent reality posits as dangerous, the extent of which could only be intellectual, philosophical, and theological bankruptcy by sweeping aside, as it must in order to advance, all the material and all the subjective contemplative structural matter of metaphysics and theology. It also subverted the presumption of a detached mind, to its binary opposite, the physiologically constrained and causally determined, brain. Rational and its attendant logic structures casts into oblivion all that is, in genesis, empirically validated.
Theology falls by the sword of rationale, and George Berkeley's commitment was to a God of abundance whose human construct's final fraught was a divorce of the gift of God's sensory certainties.
All that is not a determined condition of its physical causes, Berkeley assumed, lies outside the consideration of 'science', and science he maintained, by its own logical projection, was an impoverished, ultimately nihilistic self imposition.
Theoretical starting principles
Allegedly, Berkeley stated that individuals cannot think or talk about an object's
being, but rather think or talk about an object's
being perceived by someone. That is, individuals cannot know any "real" object or matter "behind" the object as they perceive it, which "causes" their perceptions. He thus concluded See Thomas Reid’s criticism of the doctrine of ideas, “a hypothesis, which is ancient indeed” (Reid T. “Inquiry into the Human Mind,” Dedication). This “hypothesis” was described by T. Reid in the following way:
For instance, we do not see the sun immediately, but an idea in our own minds. This idea is said to be the image, the resemblance, the representative of the sun, if there be a sun. It is from the existence of the idea that we must infer the existence of the sun. But the idea, being immediately perceived, there can be no doubt, as philosophers think, of its existence. (“Essays on the Intellectual Powers of Man” II:XIV)
According to Reid,
This is the foundation on which the whole [Berkeley’s] system rests. Supposing this principle to be true, Berkeley's system is impregnable. (“Essays on the Intellectual Powers of Man” II:X)
that all that individuals know about an object is their perception of it.
Allegedly under his theory, the object a person perceives is the only object that the person knows and experiences. If individuals need to speak at all of the "real" or "material" object, the latter in particular being a confused term that Berkeley sought to dispose of, it is this perceived object to which all such names should exclusively refer.
To some, this possibly raises the question whether this perceived object is "objective" in the sense of being "the same" for fellow humans. In fact, is the concept of "other" human beings, beyond an individual's perception of them, valid? Berkeley argued that since an individual experiences other humans in the way they speak to him—something that does not originating from his own activity—and since he learns that their view of the world is consistent with his, he can believe in their existence and in the world being identical or similar for everyone.
It follows that:
- Any knowledge of the world is to be obtained only through direct perception.
- Error comes about through thinking about what individuals perceive.
- Knowledge of the world of people, things and actions around them may be purified and perfected merely by stripping away all thought, and with it language, from their pure perceptions.
From this it follows that:
- The ideal form of scientific knowledge is obtained by pursuing pure de-intellectualized perceptions.
- If individuals pursue these, we can obtain the deepest insights into the natural world and the world of human thought and action available to man.
- The goal of all science, therefore, is to de-intellectualize or de-conceptualize, and thereby purify, human perceptions.
Theology
A convinced adherent of religion, Berkeley believed God to be present as an immediate cause of all our experiences.
The course of the Irish bishop’s thought is interesting. He did not evade the question of the external source of the diversity of the sense data at the disposal of the human individual. He strove simply to show that the causes of sensations could not be things, because what we called things, and considered without grounds to be something different from our sensations, were built up wholly from sensations. There must consequently be some other external source of the inexhaustible diversity of sensations (such is the logic of the subjective idealist) The source of our sensations, Berkeley concluded, could only be God; He gave them to man, who had to see in them signs and symbols that carried God’s word.
Here is Berkeley’s proof of the existence of God:
Whatever power I may have over my own thoughts, I find the ideas actually perceived by Sense have not a like dependence on my will. When in broad daylight I open my eyes, it is not in my power to choose whether I shall see or no, or to determine what particular objects shall present themselves to my view; and so likewise as to the hearing and other senses; the ideas imprinted on them are not creatures of my will. There is therefore some other Will or Spirit that produces them (Berkeley. Principles #29)
And that "other Will or Spirit" is God. Hence, it follows that
Berkeley’s mystic idealism (as Kant aptly christened it) claimed that nothing separated man and God (except materialist misconceptions, of course), since nature or matter did not exist as a reality independent of consciousness. The revelation of God was directly accessible to man, according to this doctrine; it was the sense-perceived world, the world of man’s sensations, which came to him from on high for him to decipher and so grasp the divine purpose.
God is not the distant engineer of Newtonian machinery that in the fullness of time led to the growth of a tree in the university quadrangle. Rather, my perception of the tree is an idea that God's mind has produced in mine, and the tree continues to exist in the quadrangle when "nobody" is there, simply because God is an infinite mind that perceives all.
Berkeley’s inference from the sense data to God’s existence is sometimes taken lightly. A number of critics believe that such a “proof” is merely a stroke of tactics, and Berkeley's transition to a stance of objective idealism is meant to avoid solipsistic consequences of the “esse est percipi” formula. It is traditionally accepted that a logical development of Berkeley’s immaterialism leads to solipsism, to the assertion that nothing but the self exists. Berkeley’s contemporaries had already imputed solipsism to him. Thomas Reid’s reaction is typical. In
Essays on the Intellectual Powers of Man (II, X), he argues that Berkeley’s system
seems to take away all the evidence we have of other intelligent beings like ourselves. What I call a father, a brother, or a friend, is only a parcel of ideas in my own mind. I can find no principle in Berkeley's system, which affords me even probable ground to conclude that there are other intelligent beings, like myself. I am left alone, as the only creature of God in the universe, in that forlorn state of egoism into which it is said some of the disciples of Des Cartes were brought by his philosophy.
It was Berkeley whom Diderot bore in mind speaking to d’Alambert about a mad “harpsichord”:
There came a moment of madness when the feeling harpsichord thought that it was the only harpsichord in the world, and that the whole harmony of the universe resided in it. (Diderot. Conversation between D'Alembert and Diderot)
Similar interpretation of Berkeley’s philosophy finds wide support among scholars at present.
Berkeley identified objects with sensations, and that was the ineradicable fault of his essentially solipsistic theory.
Berkeley himself admitted that his immaterialistic principles provoked doubts about the existence of other minds:
It is granted we have neither an immediate evidence nor a demonstrative knowledge of the existence of other finite spirits. (Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous, III)
According to Berkeley, a verisimilar, feasible logical conclusion based on analogy is the only ground for one’s belief in other minds (
Principles #145...148).
The philosophy of David Hume concerning causality and objectivity is an elaboration of another aspect of Berkeley's philosophy. As Berkeley's thought progressed, his works took on a more Platonic character:
Siris, in particular, displays an interest in highly abstruse and speculative metaphysics not to be found in the earlier works. However, A.A. Luce, the most eminent Berkeley scholar of the 20th century, constantly stressed the continuity of Berkeley's philosophy. The fact that Berkeley returned to his major works throughout his life, issuing revised editions with only minor changes, also counts against any theory that attributes to him a significant volte-face.
Over a century later Berkeley's thought experiment was summarized in a limerick by Ronald Knox and an anonymous reply:
- There was a young man who said "God
- Must find it exceedingly odd
- :To think that the tree
- :Should continue to be
- When there's no one about in the quad."
- "Dear Sir: Your astonishment's odd;
- I am always about in the quad.
- :And that's why the tree
- :Will continue to be
- Since observed by, Yours faithfully, God."
In reference to Berkeley's philosophy, Dr. Samuel Johnson kicked a heavy stone and exclaimed, "I refute it
thus!" A philosophical empiricist might reply that the only thing that Dr. Johnson knew about the stone was what he saw with his eyes, felt with his foot, and heard with his ears. That is, the
existence of the stone consisted exclusively of Dr. Johnson's
perceptions. What the stone
really consisted of (given that such a question can in fact be asked sensibly) could be entirely different in construction to what was perceived - it existed, ultimately, as an idea in his mind, nothing more and nothing less.
Relativity arguments
John Locke (Berkeley's predecessor) states that we define an object by its primary and secondary qualities. He takes heat as an example of a secondary quality. If you put one hand in a bucket of cold water, and the other hand in a bucket of warm water, then put both hands in a bucket of lukewarm water, one of your hands is going to tell you that the water is cold and the other that the water is hot. Locke says that since two different objects (both your hands) perceive the water to be hot
and cold, then the heat is not a quality of the water.
While Locke used this argument to distinguish primary from secondary qualities, Berkeley extends it to cover primary qualities in the same way. For example, he says that size is not a quality of an object because the size of the object depends on the distance between the observer and the object, or the size of observer. Since an object is a different size to different observers, then size is not a quality of the object. Berkeley rejects shape with a similar argument and then asks: if neither primary qualities nor secondary qualities are of the object, then how can we say that there is anything more than the qualities we observe?
Philosophy of science
- For more details on this topic, see:
New theory of vision
It is worth noting in this regard that: in
sections 1-51 of his
Essay Towards a New Theory of Vision, Berkeley argued against the classical scholars of optics by holding that:
spatial depth, as the distance that separates the perceiver from the perceived object is itself invisible; namely, that space is perceived by experience instead of the senses
per se.
Philosophy of physics
How profound this interest was can be judged from numerous entries in Berkeley’s
Philosophical Commentaries (1707—1708). Here is one of them:
Mem. to Examine & accurately discuss the scholium of the 8th Definition of Mr Newton’s Principia. (#316)
Philosophy of mathematics
Berkeley’s “Philosophical Commentaries” (1707—1708) witness to his interest in mathematics:
Axiom. No reasoning about things whereof we have no idea. Therefore no reasoning about Infinitesimals. (#354)
Take away the signs from Arithmetic & Algebra, & pray wt remains? (#767)These are sciences purely Verbal, & entirely useless but for Practise in Societys of Men. No speculative knowledge, no comparison of Ideas in them. (#768)
In 1707 Berkeley published two treatises on mathematics.
In addition to his contributions to philosophy, Bishop Berkeley was also very influential in the development of mathematics, although in a rather indirect sense. In 1734, he published
The Analyst, subtitled
A DISCOURSE Addressed to an Infidel Mathematician. That was a critique of the calculus. Florian Cajori called this treatise “the most spectacular event of the century in the history of British mathematics.” The infidel mathematician in question is believed to have been either Edmond Halley, or Isaac Newton himself—though if to the latter, the discourse was then posthumously addressed, as Newton died in 1727.
The Analyst represented a direct attack on the foundations and principles of Infinitesimal calculus and, in particular, the notion of fluxion or infinitesimal change, which Newton and Leibniz used to develop the calculus. Berkeley coined the phrase Ghosts of departed quantities, familiar to students of calculus (see Ian Stewart's book From Here to Infinity, chapter 6), which captures the gist of his criticism.
Berkeley regarded his criticism of calculus as part of his broader campaign against the religious implications of Newtonian mechanics as a defence of traditional Christianity against deism, which tends to distance God from His worshippers.
The difficulties raised by Berkeley were still present in the work of Cauchy whose approach to infinitesimal calculus was a combination of infinitesimals and a notion of limit, and were eventually sidestepped by Weierstrass by means of his (?, ?) approach, which eliminated infinitesimals altogether. More recently, Abraham Robinson restored infinitesimal methods in his 1966 book
Non-standard analysis by showing that they can be used rigorously.
Moral philosophy
See also: George Berkeley “Passive Obedience: or, The Christian Doctrine of not restricting the Supreme Power” //
The Works of George Berkeley. Ed. by Alexander Campbell Fraser. In 4 Volumes. Vol. 4 Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1901.
Sec. l-re: Häyry, M. and Häyry, H. (1994), “Obedience to Rules and Berkeley’s Theological Utilitarianism”, Utilitas 6, 2, 233-242.
Berkeley’s place in the history of philosophy
Berkeley's
Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge was published three years before the publication of Arthur Collier's
Clavis Universalis, which made assertions similar to those of Berkeley's. However, there seemed to have been no influence or communication between the two writers.
German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer once wrote of him: "Berkeley was, therefore, the first to treat the subjective starting-point really seriously and to demonstrate irrefutably its absolute necessity. He is the father of idealism".
George Berkeley has gone down in the handbooks as a great spokesman of British empiricism. He influenced many modern philosophers, especially David Hume. Thomas Reid admitted that he put forward a drastic criticism of Berkeleianism after he had been an admirer of Berkeley’s philosophical system for a long time. Berkeley’s “thought made possible the work of Hume and thus Kant, notes Alfred North Whitehead.” Some authors draw a parallel between Berkeley and Edmund Husserl.
During Berkeley’s lifetime his philosophical ideas were comparatively uninfluential. But interest in his doctrine grew from the 1870s when Alexander Campbell Fraser published “The Works of George Berkeley.” A powerful impulse to serious studies in Berkeley’s philosophy was given by A. A. Luce and Thomas Edmund Jessop, thanks to whom Berkeley scholarship was raised to the rank of a special field of historico-philosophical science.