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From Locke to the radical consequence of Berkeley's purely immanent philosophy

Edmund Husserl

pp. 145-161

Résumé

A particular basis of our critique above concerned Locke's doctrine of material substances and their qualities, or in other words his attempt to show how true exterior existence presents itself internally in the domain of ideas, how the subject, which has in an immediate way only the tabula rasa of its ideas, there obtains for itself | an image of what is outside and the conviction that it truly exists. In the same vein, our critique could then proceed to address the entire series of Locke's subsequent remarks pertaining to the constitutive categories of the cognition of nature, to space, time, power, cause, effect, and so on. [However,] to continue in this direction is of no appreciable interest to us.

Détails de la publication

Publié dans:

Husserl Edmund (2019) First philosophy: lectures 1923/24 and related texts from the manuscripts (1920-1925). Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 145-161

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-024-1597-1_8

Citation complète:

Husserl Edmund, 2019, From Locke to the radical consequence of Berkeley's purely immanent philosophy. In E. Husserl First philosophy (145-161). Dordrecht, Springer.