A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge
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About This Book
The treatise examines the foundations of human knowledge and argues that all ideas originate in perception, so what are called external objects are merely collections of sensible qualities experienced by minds. It denies the need for a material substratum and maintains that the continuity and regularity of experience are accounted for by a divine perceiver who sustains perceptions. The author distinguishes ideas of sensation from those arising by reflection and criticizes the appeal to abstract general ideas as a source of philosophical error. Through systematic argument and attention to first principles and language, the work defends an immaterialist account of reality and addresses skepticism, irreligion, and the soul’s natural immortality.
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