ABSTRACT

This book, first published in 1989, presents sixteen articles on Kant and Berkeley, examining their attitude to the physical world. They were both idealists, regarding the physical world as being in some way a product of perceptions and thought. At the same time they both held it to be no mere illusion, but real and objective: it was in a sense ideal, but in a different sense also real.

chapter |19 pages

ByR. C. S. Walker

chapter |19 pages

Annual Philosophical Lecture Henriette Hertz Trust

A Comparison Of Kant’s Idealism With That Of Berkeley
ByH. W. B. Joseph

chapter |19 pages

Kant’s Refutation Of Dogmatic Idealism

ByR. C. S. Walker

chapter |19 pages

Berkeley And Kant

ByGeorge P. Adams

chapter |19 pages

Kant and “The Dogmatic Idealism of Berkeley”

ByMargaret D. Wilson

chapter |19 pages

Kant and Berkeley

The Alternative Theories
ByGeorge Miller

chapter |19 pages

Kant’s Critique of Berkeley

ByHenry E. Allison

chapter |19 pages

On Kant’s Analysis of Berkeley

ByGale D. Justin

chapter |19 pages

Kant’s Refutation of Idealism

ByMyron Gochnauer

chapter |19 pages

Kant’s Transcendental Idealism

ByWilfrid Sellars

chapter |19 pages

Kants Phenomenalism

ByRichard E. Aquila

chapter |19 pages

Re-Relating Kant and Berkeley

ByGale D. Justin

chapter |19 pages

Kant’s Conception of Berkeley’s Idealism

ByG.J. Mattey

chapter V|19 pages

The ‘Phenomenalisms’ of Berkeley and Kant

ByMargaret D. Wilson, Berkeley Kant

chapter |19 pages

Idealism

Kant And Berkeley
ByR. C. S. Walker