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Learning path · 8 steps
The Immaterialist Path
Immaterialism, developed by George Berkeley, holds that material substance does not exist independently of minds — to be is to be perceived. All that exists are minds and their ideas. Berkeley developed this radical position as a response to Locke's representative theory of perception, arguing that the very notion of mind-independent matter is incoherent, and that God sustains the world by perceiving it eternally.
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Concept · 5 minUp next
Esse Est Percipi
George Berkeley
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Concept · 5 min
Against Abstract Ideas
George Berkeley
3

Concept · 6 min
The Refutation of Matter
George Berkeley
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Concept · 5 min
The Language of the Author of Nature
George Berkeley
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Concept · 5 min
Sensible Qualities Are in the Mind
George Berkeley
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Concept · 5 min
Immaterialism and Common Sense
George Berkeley
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Full text · 3 chapters
A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge
George Berkeley
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Full text · 3 chapters
Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous
George Berkeley
Further reading
More from Immaterialism, beyond the core path.