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Benjamin Hill

University of Western Ontario
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  •  Publications
    35
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 More details
  • University of Western Ontario
    Department of Philosophy
    Associate Professor
University of Iowa
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2003
London, Ontario, Canada
Areas of Specialization
Epistemology
17th/18th Century Philosophy
Areas of Interest
17th/18th Century Philosophy
  • All publications (35)
  •  287
    Reconciling Locke’s Definition of Knowledge with Knowing Reality
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 44 (1): 91-105. 2006.
    A common criticism of Locke’s ideational definition of knowledge is that it contradicts his accounts of knowledge’s reality and sensitive knowledge. Here it is argued that the ideational definiton of knowledge is compatible with knowledge of idea-independent reality. The key is Locke’s notion of the signification. Nominal agreements obtain if and only if the ideas’ descriptive contents are the ground for truth; real agreements obtain only if their total denotation are the grounds for truth. The …Read more
    A common criticism of Locke’s ideational definition of knowledge is that it contradicts his accounts of knowledge’s reality and sensitive knowledge. Here it is argued that the ideational definiton of knowledge is compatible with knowledge of idea-independent reality. The key is Locke’s notion of the signification. Nominal agreements obtain if and only if the ideas’ descriptive contents are the ground for truth; real agreements obtain only if their total denotation are the grounds for truth. The signification of the ideas determine whether they denote real or fantastical objects. Three types of ideas, simple quality-ideas, modal ideas, and relational ideas, necessarily signify real objects. The fourth type, the ideas of substances, are real only if those particular combinations of qualitites have been perceived to co-exist. Locke’s ideas are intrinsically either real or fantastical and thus, it is argued, his models of truth and knowledge’s reality are far from typical correspondence theories
    Locke: KnowledgeLocke: Epistemology, Misc
  •  128
    Locke’s modes
    Southwest Philosophy Review 20 (1): 173-182. 2004.
    Locke: Substance
  •  102
    What Hylas Should Have Said to Philonous
    Southwest Philosophy Review 16 (1): 23-31. 2000.
    Berkeley: ImmaterialismBerkeley: Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous
  •  145
    Newton's de gravitatione et aequipondio fluidorum and Lockean four-dimensionalism
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 11 (2). 2003.
    This Article does not have an abstract
    Three- and Four-DimensionalismLocke: IdentityLocke: PersonsIsaac NewtonLocke and Other Philosophers
  • Catherine Wilson, Epicureanism at the Origins of Modernity (review)
    Philosophy in Review 29 (6): 442. 2009.
    17th/18th Century PhilosophyEpicureans, Misc
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