The Essential Berkeley and Neo-Berkeley
Cover -- Contents -- Preface -- Abbreviations -- Part One Berkeley's Philosophy -- Section 1 Overview and summary -- Section 2 Berkeley's life and works -- Section 3 The structure of Berkeley's Principles -- Section 4 Berkeley's dualism and dualistic experience -- Section 5 Dualism or monism? -- Section 6 The phenomenalist interpretation -- Section 7 Overview -- Section 8 Hume's phenomenalism -- Section 9 The cde -- Section 10 Alciphron , the TVV and DHP 1734 -- Section 11 James Hill on the notional -- Section 12 The 2 or 3 advantages of section 27 doctrine -- Section 13 What underpins the notional -- Section 14 The big historical picture -- Section 15 Berkeley on objects: The revision -- Section 16 Berkeley's Siris -- Part Two Neo-Berkeley -- Section 1 Berkeley in 1752-1753 -- Section 2 The DMT: Why it hasn't been accepted -- Section 3 Berkeley's immaterialism and monotheistic God -- Section 4 Neo-Berkeley on God and other dualistic minds -- Section 5 God and theistic and dualistic intimacy -- Section 6 Dualistic intimacy -- Section 7 Tactual visual typology -- #1: Review of Neo-B in part one -- #2: Introduction of the TVT -- #3a: Locke -- #3b: Russell -- #3c: Kant and Dr Johnson -- #3d: T. K. Abbott -- #4: The valley and hills model -- #5: The role of imagery and normal synaesthesia -- #6: The Maupertius move -- #7: Berkeley on the vt summit -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.