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74Reexamining Berkeley's Philosophy (edited book)University of Toronto Press. 2007.This collection confronts the question: how can we know anything about the world if all we know are our ideas?
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60New interpretations of Berkeley's thought (edited book)Humanity Books. 2008.In this set of previously unpublished essays, noted scholars from North America and Europe describe how the Irish philosopher George Berkeley (1684-1753) continues to inspire debates about his views on knowledge, reality, God, freedom, mathematics, and religion. Here discussions about Berkeley's account of physical objects, minds, and God's role in human experience are resolved within explicitly ethical and theological contexts. This collection uses debates about Berkeley's immaterialism and the…Read more
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77A philosophical theory of literary continuity and changeSouthern Journal of Philosophy 18 (3): 275-280. 1980.
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65L'Anthropologie de saint Thomas, ed. N. A. Luyten (review)Modern Schoolman 53 (3): 319-319. 1976.
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89
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941Edwards as PhilosopherIn Stephen J. Stein (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Jonathan Edwards, Cambridge University Press. pp. 162-80. 2006.
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120Civility and sociability: Hobbes on man and citizenJournal of the History of Philosophy 18 (2): 209-215. 1980.
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103Postmodernity, Poststructuralism, and the Historiography of Modern PhilosophyInternational Philosophical Quarterly 35 (3): 255-267. 1995.Well-known for its criticism of totalizing accounts of reason and truth, postmodern thought also makes positive contributions to our understanding of the sensual, ideological, and linguistic contingencies that inform modernist representations of self, history, and the world. The positive side of postmodernity includes structuralism and poststructuralism, particularly as expressed by theorists concerned with practices of the body (Lacan, Foucault, Deleuze), commodity differences (Adorno, Althusse…Read more
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1094Berkeley's Doctrine of Mind and the “Black List Hypothesis”: A DialogueSouthern Journal of Philosophy 51 (1): 24-41. 2013.Clues about what Berkeley was planning to say about mind in his now-lost second volume of the Principles seem to abound in his Notebooks. However, commentators have been reluctant to use his unpublished entries to explicate his remarks about spiritual substances in the Principles and Dialogues for three reasons. First, it has proven difficult to reconcile the seemingly Humean bundle theory of the self in the Notebooks with Berkeley's published characterization of spirits as “active beings or pri…Read more
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55Myth and the Grammar of Discovery in Francis BaconPhilosophy and Rhetoric 15 (4): 219-237. 1982.
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Ramist Dialectic in Leibniz's Early ThoughtIn Mark Kulstad, Mogens Laerke & David Snyder (eds.), The philosophy of the young Leibniz, Steiner. pp. 59-66. 2009.
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IntroductionIn Stephen Hartley Daniel (ed.), Reexamining Berkeley's Philosophy, University of Toronto Press. 2007.
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2100The ramist context of Berkeley's philosophyBritish Journal for the History of Philosophy 9 (3). 2001.Berkeley's doctrines about mind, the language of nature, substance, minima sensibilia, notions, abstract ideas, inference, and freedom appropriate principles developed by the 16th-century logician Peter Ramus and his 17th-century followers (e.g., Alexander Richardson, William Ames, John Milton). Even though Berkeley expresses himself in Cartesian or Lockean terms, he relies on a Ramist way of thinking that is not a form of mere rhetoric or pedagogy but a logic and ontology grounded in Stoicism. …Read more
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142Descartes on Myth and Ingenuity / IngeniumSouthern Journal of Philosophy 23 (2): 157-170. 1985.
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65The Narrative Character of Myth and Philosophy in VicoInternational Studies in Philosophy 20 (1): 1-9. 1988.
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1461Berkeley, Suárez, and the Esse-Existere DistinctionAmerican Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 74 (4): 621-636. 2000.For Berkeley, a thing's existence 'esse' is nothing more than its being perceived 'as that thing'. It makes no sense to ask (with Samuel Johnson) about the 'esse' of the mind or the specific act of perception, for that would be like asking what it means for existence to exist. Berkeley's "existere is percipi or percipere" (NB 429) thus carefully adopts the scholastic distinction between 'esse' and 'existere' ignored by Locke and others committed to a substantialist notion of mind. Following the …Read more
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8John R. Roberts. A Metaphysics for the Mob: The Philosophy of George Berkeley (review)Berkeley Studies 18 36-39. 2007.
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131Berkeley's 'Alciphron': English Text and Essays in Interpretation (review)British Journal for the History of Philosophy 19 (3): 563-566. 2011.
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1Lawrence J. Hatab, Myth and Philosophy: A Contest of Truths (review)Philosophy in Review 11 (5): 324-326. 1991.Review of Lawrence Hatab's *Myth and Philosophy*
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1435Edwards' OccasionalismIn Don Schweitzer (ed.), Jonathan Edwards as Contemporary, Peter Lang. pp. 1-14. 2010.Instead of focusing on the Malebranche-Edwards connection regarding occasionalism as if minds are distinct from the ideas they have, I focus on how finite minds are particular expressions of God's will that there be the distinctions by which ideas are identified and differentiated. This avoids problems, created in the accounts of Fiering, Lee, and especially Crisp, about the inherently idealist character of Edwards' occasionalism.
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98Ethical Theory and Journalistic EthicsInternational Journal of Applied Philosophy 1 (1): 19-25. 1982.
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53The Philosophy of Ingenuity: Vico on Proto-PhilosophyPhilosophy and Rhetoric 18 (4): 236-243. 1985.
College Station, Texas, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |
| History of Western Philosophy |