• George Berkeley Alciphron in Focus (edited book)
    Routledge. 2013.
    _Alciphron, or the Minute Philosopher_ (1732) is Berkeley's main work of philosophical theology and a crucial source of his views on meaning and language. This edition contains the four most important dialogues and a selection of critical essays and commentaries reflecting the response of such writers as Hutcheson, Mill and Antony Flew. The only single edition currently in print, it argues that _Alciphron_ has a more important place both in the Berkeley canon and in early modern philosophy than …Read more
  • Thinking Matter: Materialism in Eighteenth‐Century Britain
    Philosophical Books 26 (2): 85-87. 2009.
  • The material reprinted in this two-volume set, first published in 1989, covers the first eighty-five years in responses to George Berkeley’s writings. David Berman identifies several key waves of eighteenth-century criticism surrounding Berkeley’s philosophies, ranging from hostile and discounted, to valued and defended. The first volume includes an account of the life of Berkeley by J. Murray and key responses from 1711 to 1748, whilst the second volume covers the years between 1745 and 1796. T…Read more
  • The material reprinted in this two-volume set, first published in 1989, covers the first eighty-five years in responses to George Berkeley’s writings. David Berman identifies several key waves of eighteenth-century criticism surrounding Berkeley’s philosophies, ranging from hostile and discounted, to valued and defended. The first volume includes an account of the life of Berkeley by J. Murray and key responses from 1711 to 1748, whilst the second volume covers the years between 1745 and 1796. T…Read more
  •  12
    Chapter 2 is on Whately’s critique of Hume’s attack on miracles, and how far it was successful. Here I try to show that Whately’s critique was aimed at two main Humean notions which underlie Hume’s attack on miracles: (1) that the only justification for belief in matters of fact is experience or observation, rather than testimony; and (2) that the meaning of the term ‘miracle’ is an event that is improbable, rather than supernatural. Whately’s showing that (1) and (2) are mistaken forms the basi…Read more
  •  54
    Descartes and the Doubting Mind (review)
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 21 (2): 288-292. 2013.
    No abstract.
  •  5
    Russell’s Moral Quandary
    Philosophy Now 158 36-39. 2023.
  •  20
    This book examines Richard Whately's classic book Historic Doubts Relative to Napoleon Buonaparte. After considering its textual development, the analysis focusses on Whately's idea of the 'Preliminary Question'; the idea that in the debate about Jesus's miracles there is a more basic question that has been overlooked and which invalidates the debate. It is asked whether the notion of a Preliminary Question might not illuminate other philosophical disputes. Finally, a variant of the Preliminary …Read more
  • Probably no doctrine has excited as much horror and abuse as atheism. This first history of British atheism, first published in 1987, tries to explain this reaction while exhibiting the development of atheism from Hobbes to Russell. Although avowed atheism appeared surprisingly late – 1782 in Britain – there were covert atheists in the middle seventeenth century. By tracing its development from so early a date, Dr Berman gives an account of an important and fascinating strand of intellectual his…Read more
  •  14
    This chapter introduce a new and different Preliminary Question. This is where disputes show not that the disputants are all wrong but all right. Here the main dispute is between monists, such as Hobbes, and dualists such as Descartes. More specifically I try to show that the monists and dualists are both right, because they are of different basic types, with different forms of consciousness; which, I try to show, is confirmed by the history of philosophy. And this conclusion also follows, I arg…Read more
  •  11
    This chapter is about the Preliminary Question, but extended into three areas of philosophy: (1) Draws on Bertrand Russell’s view that there is no truth in philosophy but only in the sciences. (2) Looks at the question of life after death and at the agnostic argument, according to which both those who believe in life after death and those who reject it are mistaken. (3) Is about the disputes concerning Hume’s (alleged) retraction of his theory of personal identity. For while Hume scholars believ…Read more
  •  11
    This chapter focuses on the developments of Whately’s text, from 1819 to its last edition in Whately’s lifetime in 1862. It also describes how he enlarged his work by adding seven Postscripts in different editions and a Preface (in two stages). The Chapter then goes on to explain how these additions changed the way his work was read and understood. It also looks at why the work was so successful, and the way it was innovative.
  •  13
    This chapter is about Whately’s understanding of the Preliminary Question, and the three disputes he used to illustrate it. The first illustration concerns King Charles II, the second Copernicus’s theory of falling bodies, the third is on the Moscow fire. Whately’s claim is that in all three cases, when the Preliminary Question is asked, it is found that there is no truth in any of the three disputes. This then provides the setting for the main subject of his Historic Doubts: the life and charac…Read more
  •  12
    My aim in this chapter is to look closely at A. J. Ayer, the philosopher who is the terminus of this work; then to use my understanding of him to point to a number of tangles in twentieth century philosophy and the way they can be untangled. However, first it is necessary to be clear about Ayer’s philosophical position. Nor is this an easy matter, for Ayer wrote many philosophical books and articles after his first and most celebrated work, Language, Truth and Logic [= LTL] was published in 1936…Read more
  •  16
    Two persons looking into a field can each say ‘I see the brown cow’ and be conscious of the cow they see. And as there is one thing they see and are talking about, namely the cow, it is assumed that their respective consciousness is also the same. This, very briefly, is what I call the Assumption: that there is one basic kind of consciousness which all human beings have. It is this Assumption which I reject. For the truth, I argue, is that there are two basic kinds of human consciousness, one wh…Read more
  •  19
    I can indicate the main aims of this chapter by explaining its title. By ‘Irish Philosophy, Past’, I understand that period when Ireland was at the cutting edge of world philosophy. This was the golden age, which was born with John Toland’s Christianity not Mysterious (1696), grew with the answers to his challenge by Peter Browne, William King and Edward Synge, and culminated in the work of Hutcheson, Burke and especially Berkeley, and then came to a close in the late 1750s.
  •  53
    Consciousness from Descartes to Ayer
    Springer Verlag. 2021.
    The title is meant to indicate that consciousness is being examined largely within the history of philosophy, and within the period of time from Descartes to Ayer. Investigators aiming to understand consciousness and minds usually try to take account of all individual human minds, so as to have the most data for the most encompassing induction. The problem with that approach is that because of the vastness of the data, its results tend to be vague, lacking the specificity of studies of individua…Read more
  •  1
    Locke on Particles: a Reply to Nuchelmans
    with Timothy Williamson
    Logique Et Analyse 31 (123-124): 213-218. 1988.
  •  638
    This book is about A. J. Ayer and his unusual mind, which was dramatically changed in 1988, when he had a Near Death Experience, i.e. NDE. The book is also about dreams, an area in which Ayer's unusual mind showed itself. But most important, this book is about whether there is life after bodily death. Chapter one has two parts. In part one I examine what Ayer says about his NDE; which is contained in four documents: (1) a letter he wrote to the Spectator, published on 30 July 1988 (2) an articl…Read more
  • Atheism and Inquiry
    Free Inquiry 17. 1997.
  •  20
    The essential Berkeley and Neo-Berkeley
    Bloomsbury Academic. 2022.
    The Essential Berkeley and Neo-Berkeley is an introduction to the life and work of one of the most significant thinkers in the history of philosophy and a penetrating philosophical assessment of his lasting legacy. David Berman goes beyond providing an introduction and gives us a broader and deeper appreciation of Berkeley as a philosopher. He argues for Berkeley's work as a philosophical system with coherence and important key themes hitherto unexplored and provides an analysis of why he thinks…Read more
  •  177
    Spinoza’s Spiders, Schopenhauer’s Dogs
    Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 29 202-209. 1982.
  • Hume and Collins. Two Ways of Lying Theologically
    In Kreimendahl (ed.), Aufklärung und Skepsis, Geburtstag, Stuttgart. 1995.