Berkeley, Hume, Kant, & Mill (PHIL 220)
Back | Home | Up | Next
 
Tom Ryckman
Philosophy Department
Lawrence University

 

Syllabi | Scholarship | Philosophy Alums | Philosophy@LU | Philosophy Links | Philosophy of Language Links | Philosophy Multimedia | Why Philosophy? | News | Contents
 

Office Hours

MWF 8:30-9:40
Tu 11:00-12:00
and by appointment

Syllabi

Introduction to Philosophy
Symbolic Logic
Berkeley, Hume, Kant, & Mill
Early Analytic Philosophy
Epistemology
Metaphysics
Philosophy of Science
Philosophy of Art
Philosophy of Language
Philosophy of Mind
Topics in Logic
Puzzles and Paradoxes


Other Links

Ryckman's Logic Works
Philosophy of Language Links
A Berkelean Conversation
Postmodernist Kuhnian Page

Philosophy Blogs

PHIL220: History of Philosophy: Berkeley, Hume, Kant, and MILL

Texts:

  • A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge. George Berkeley.
  • Enquiries Concerning Human Understanding. David Hume.
  • Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics. Immanuel Kant.
  • Grounding for the Metaphysics of Morals. Immanuel Kant.
  • Utilitarianism. John Stuart Mill.
  • The Philosopher's Dictionary. (2nd ed.) Robert Martin.

Requirements:

4 of 6 pop-quizzes, a mid-term exam, and a final exam.

Grade:

Of the 100 (possible) points, 20 are from the pop-quizzes, 40 are from the mid-term, 40 are from the final exam.

Outline:

A. Introduction.

B. Berkeley.

  • Berkeley's Idealism and critique of Materialism1.
  • Critique of Abstractionism.
  • Berkeley's Idealism and critique of Materialism2.
  • Replies to anticipated objections.

C. Hume.

  • On impressions.
  • On experience.
  • Hume's Problem of Induction.
  • On the belief that there are bodies
  • On the self.

D. Kant.

  • The synthetic-a priori.
  • Kantian Metaphysics.
  • Kantian Ethics.

E. Mill.

  • Millian Ethics.
  • Mill's Phenomenalism.

F. Conclusions. Getting outside the circle of one's own ideas.

George Berkeley in America Berkeley's "Whitehall."

Berkeley lived here, near Newport, RI, from 1728 to 1731.

I served as "Philosopher in Residence at Whitehall"  during the summers of 1982 and 1984.

To be is to be percieved.
 
Reason is and ought to be the slave of the passions.
 
How would you feel if, as a law of nature, everybody acted as you are about to act?
 
Maximize "utility" baby!

Hume on Bodies

[bottom.htm]