"Perceptual Acquaintance " was first published in 1984.
Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make
long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published
unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press
editions.
Philosophers, wrote Thomas Reid in 1785, "all suppose that we
perceive not external objects immediately, and that the immediate
objects of perception are only certain shadows of the external
objects." To Reid, a founding father of the common-sense school of
philosophy, John Locke's "way of ideas" threatened to supplant, in
human knowledge, the world of physical objects and events--and to
point down the dreaded path to scepticism.
John Yolton finds Reid at least partly responsible for this
standard (and by now stereotypic) account of Locke and his
eighteenth-century British successors on the subject of perception.
By carefully examining the writings of Descartes and the
Cartesians, and Locke and his successors, Yolton is able to suggest
an alternative to this interpretation of their views. He goes back
to a wide range of original texts--those of the period's major
philosophers, to Descartes' scholastic precursors, to obscure
pamphleteers, and to writers on religion, natural philosophy,
medicine, and optics--all in an effort to help us understand the
issues without the interference of modern labels and categories.
The subtle changes over time reveal an important transformation in
the understanding of perception, yet one that is prefigured in
earlier work, contrary to Reid's view of the past. Included in
Yolton's reevaluation is a full account of the role of Berkeley and
Hume in the study of perceptual acquaintance, and of the connection
between their work.
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