John Locke: empiricist  There are no innate ideas.  ALL knowledge comes from sense experience.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
© Michael Lacewing Empiricism on the origin of ideas Michael Lacewing
Advertisements

Frontiers of Western Philosophy Empiricism
PHIL 101 DAY 3 Epistemology Day 2 Maymester 2007.
Innate ideas Michael Lacewing © Michael Lacewing.
Perception and the External World 1  Direct Realism is the doctrine that perception puts us in direct contact with reality.  “Direct” because nothing.
Empiricism Part I John Locke ( CE) George Berkeley ( CE)
Berkeley’s Epistemology George Berkeley – Born in 1685 at Dysert Castle in Ireland. – Elected a junior lecturer at Trinity College in Dublin in 1707.
Descartes’ trademark argument Michael Lacewing
Berkeley’s idealism (brief)
Empiricism All knowledge of things in the world is a posteriori (that is, based ultimately on experience). Purely mental (i.e., a priori) operations of.
LECTURE 9 BISHOP BERKELEY PRIMARY AND SECONDARY QUALITIES & THE “CONCEIVABILITY” ARGUMENT.
Charting the Terrain of Knowledge-1
Or Is your science safe? Virtue: Tentative Skepticism Deductive reason & Maths Vice: unsupportable intuitions that provide foundations of deduction.
Idealism.
 Heavily influenced by Aristotle and Descartes  Empiricists around his time: › Berkeley, & Hume (all Brits including Locke)  Rationalists around his.
© Michael Lacewing Direct and representative realism Michael Lacewing
How Can We Know Anything about the World Around Us? Idealism: we can know about the world because it is comprised of our ideas Phenomenalism: physical.
Locke’s Epistemology Empiricism: Epistemological school that maintains that, ultimately, all knowledge is rooted in sense experience. John Locke Seventeenth.
LOCKE 2 An Argument that the External World [the world outside the mind] Exists.
Rationalism: Knowledge Is Acquired through Reason, not the Senses We know only that of which we are certain. Sense experience cannot guarantee certainty,
BERKELEY 2 paragraphs A WORLD OF MINDS AND IDEAS.
Concept innatism I Michael Lacewing
Concept empiricism Michael Lacewing
CHAPTER FIVE: THE SOURCES OF KNOWLEDGE P H I L O S O P H Y A Text with Readings ELEVENTH EDITION M A N U E L V E L A S Q U E Z.
An Essay Concerning Human Understanding John Locke.
Rationalism and Empiricism
BERKELEY’S CASE FOR IDEALISM (Part 1 of 2) Text source: A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge, sectns. 1-21,
Chapter 3: Knowledge Two Empiricist Theories of Knowledge: John Locke and Bishop Berkeley Introducing Philosophy, 10th edition Robert C. Solomon, Kathleen.
So, you think you know your philosophers?
A: No principles are innate 1.Everyone would have to know innate principles, but there is no such thing as a principle which everyone knows. 2.Even “Nothing.
Berkeley’s idealism (long) Michael Lacewing © Michael Lacewing.
Metaphysics in Early Modern Philosophy. The Atomic Theory of Matter The atomic theory poses a challenge to theories of substances or objects Atomic theory:
BERKELEY’S PROJECT  Bishop George Berkeley ( )  Eccentric Genius; Early “American” Scholar  Background  Concern Over Ego-Centric Predicament.
BERKELEY AND IDEALISM Strange to claim there is an external world;
David Hume ( ) “The Wrecking Ball”
John Locke.
L ECTURE 14: H UME ’ S R ADICAL E MPIRICISM. T ODAY ’ S L ECTURE In Today’s Lecture we will: 1.Recap our investigation into empiricist theories of knowledge.
Views of Epistemology- Empiricism. Empiricism Empiricism- the belief that all knowledge about the world comes from or is based in the senses (experience)
Berkeley’s Three Dialogues Is there material substance? Does the belief in material substance lead to skepticism?
1 The Empiricists: Berkeley Immaterialism Soazig Le Bihan - University of Montana.
Modern Philosophy Part Three.
Lecture 13: Empiricism.
What is an example of a secondary quality?
1 John Locke’s Theory of Knowledge ( ). 2 Empiricist All knowledge is derived from experience.
LOCKE’S PROJECT  John Locke ( )  Major Thinker In Metaphysics, Epistemology And Political Philosophy  Our Lockean Roots  Rejecting Descartes’
WEEK 4: EPISTEMOLOGY Introduction to Rationalism.
Great Works of Western Philosophy Part 2 ● Today: More Locke – Mental operations and Complex ideas. ● Ideas of Mixed Modes ● Ideas of Substances – Identity.
An Empiricist Theory of Knowledge Locke’s Theory of Knowledge Lecture 6.
PHIL 200B ● Today – Locke's Essay concerning human understanding ● Method ( ) ● Locke's Empiricism – Against innate ideas/principles. – Ideas of.
The Origin of Knowledge
Sensible Qualities Things like heat ARE qualities that are subjective. These are secondary qualities. Everyone agrees that secondary qualities DO have.
Concept Empiricist Arguments against Concept Innatism
Locke’s argument against innate concepts
Michael Lacewing Indirect realism Michael Lacewing © Michael Lacewing.
Indirect Realism Understand the argument put forward by the indirect realist. Explain how a indirect realist would respond to perceptual problems. ‘Does.
The secondary quality argument for indirect realism
The mind as a ‘tabula rasa’
Michael Lacewing Berkeley’s idealism Michael Lacewing © Michael Lacewing.
Irish bishop and philosopher
PHILOSOPHY Empiricism
George Berkeley’s Theory of Knowledge
John Locke and modern empiricism
Empiricism All knowledge of things in the world is a posteriori (that is, based ultimately on experience). Purely mental (i.e., a priori) operations of.
Do we directly perceive objects? (25 marks)
What keywords / terms have we used so far
Introduction to Philosophy Lecture 7 Berkeley
Modern Philosophy PHIL320
Is the concept of substance innate?
Substance (things in themselves)“A something I know not what”
Descartes and Hume on knowledge of the external world
Presentation transcript:

John Locke: empiricist  There are no innate ideas.  ALL knowledge comes from sense experience.

The argument against innate ideas:  An idea can only be innate if it possesses two factors: Universal consent Does not have to be taught  An idea that did have “universal consent” would not necessarily be innate.  There are no ideas that have “universal consent.”

Two sources of ideas:  Sensation  Passive faculty  Gives rise to simple ideas Colours, shapes, sounds, shapes, etc.  Reflection  Active faculty  Gives rise to complex ideas Physical objects, abstract concepts

The nature of objects  Objects are composed of two parts:  Qualities: Primary: really in the object and define what the object is. Secondary: not really in the objects except as powers to cause in us a certain sensation.  Substance: Something we know not of but must exist for qualities to reside in.

Representative Realism object mind qualitiesSimple ideas substancesubstance Complex idea

2 Problems with Representative Realism  The complex idea is supposed to represent the object. Cannot verify this claim.  Substance is that which we know not of but must exist for qualities to reside in. Substance cannot be perceived so it must not exist.

George Berkeley  “To be is to be perceived.”  If something cannot be perceived, it does not exist.  Substance cannot be perceived.  Therefore, it does not exist.  The picture of Berkeley’s theory is almost identical to Locke’s except that substance is gone.

Berkeley’s Idealism object mind qualities substancesubstance

A potential problem:  If no one is perceiving something does that mean it just doesn’t exist?  Does it just disappear?!  While it is true that existence and perception are connected things would only cease to exist, if NO ONE is perceiving them.

An experiment

How do we know things exist when we’re not perceiving them?  There must be a universal perceiver capable of perceiving everything that exists even things we do not perceive.  George Berkeley was a Bishop.

God is the universal perceiver.