If you say it is real apart from those appearances, then you have to be able to see it apart from any experience of it, as it is 'in itself'. That is what is at issue. — Wayfarer
Or what? What is the penalty of their not being 'transcendentally real'? What if they are 'consistent appearances'? — Wayfarer
If they are "consistent appearances" they would still qualify as being transcendentally real, because the consistency of their appearance is obviously, it certainly seems, not dependent on anyone's perception or experience. — John
Boswell's Life of Samuel JohnsonAfter we came out of the church, we stood talking for some time together of Bishop Berkeley's ingenious sophistry to prove the non-existence of matter, and that every thing in the universe is merely ideal. I observed, that though we are satisfied his doctrine is not true, it is impossible to refute it. I never shall forget the alacrity with which Johnson answered, striking his foot with mighty force against a large stone, till he rebounded from it, 'I refute it thus.
All appearance depend on perception. — Wayfarer
You do indeed have a very valid point. But time was out of the question. — DebateTheBait
Attempting to dismiss my arguments by equating them with Johnson's unargued 'refutation' is too cheap. — John
Berkeley recognized this problem and the lynchpin of his position that "esse est percipi" is that the consistency of appearances is due to their objects being held in God's mind. This is equivalent to objects being created by God, and if this were the case then the objects would still be transcendentally real insofar as they would be independent of human perception. — John
You are conflating two ideas: the correct (by definition) idea that all appearances are correlated with perceptions, with the incorrect idea that the consistency of appearances depends (entirely) on perception. — John
No, it isn't. It is exactly what you've been arguing. It's not a pejorative comparison. I would say the vast majority of people agree with Johnson. — Wayfarer
'Being perceived by God', I would have thought it better expressed. In any case, that is one of the facets of Berkeley's philosophy that I don't think I understand, or at any rate don't agree with. — Wayfarer
My argument is always that what we take to be real has an irreducibly subjective element, i.e. there are no objects that exist 'sui generis', in their own right, independently of cognition. Per Kant, I think space and time themselves are in some real sense subjectively constructed. — Wayfarer
I am losing interest since you seem to be unable, or at least unwilling, to present anything but reiterated assertions. — John
If you don't agree with that "facet" then you don't agree with Berkeley's philosophy, period. As I said, it is the lynchpin and without it his philosophy loses all force of explanation and persuasion — John
The fact that 'what we take to be real has an irreducibly subjective element' is not mere assertion, it builds on the entire thread. — Wayfarer
In any case, and yet again, I am arguing against the implicit assumption of the 'mind-independent' nature of reality, that the Universe exists, in the way that we understand it, absent our observation of it. This doesn't mean that, absent our observation, there is no universe, but that the kind of existence, if any, that it has, absent the organising capabilities provided by the mind, is completely unknowable and incoherent. It's part of a coherent argument, which you continue to call 'irrelevant' or 'a strawman', or as a personal slight. So you accuse me of 'distorting' what you say, whilst persistently misrepresenting what I say. Maybe it is time to quit!
But it seems it must be a problem for you, though. I suppose when you go home at night you greet a different companion each time. — John
I wonder how it is that you are able to recognize your wife, since she is never the same person from one day, or even one minute, to the next. — John
It depends on how you define "ideas." I will stick with my answer as written for now. — aletheist
As I said earlier, in response to wayfarer's quote from Kant, there is an assumed continuity which allows us to say that a person remains the same person. — Metaphysician Undercover
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