Up@dawn 2.0 (blogger)

Delight Springs

Tuesday, February 20, 2024

Questions FEB 22

The exam is a week from Thursday. Here's your Audio review, Part 1Part 2 coming soon. Meanwhile, the best way to prepare is by revisiting the relevant texts pertaining to the daily questions. If someone would care to earn a bonus base AND provide a helpful service, you could copy and paste all the questions since the semester began into a new post (you'll need to become an Author on the site to do that, let me know if you want to volunteer and I'll send you an Author invitation).  

LHP

1. How did Samuel Johnson "refute" Berkeley's theory? Did he succeed? Why or why not?

2. What made Berkeley an idealist, and an immaterialist? Are you one, the other, both, neither?

3. In what way did Berkeley claim to be more consistent than Locke? DId Berkeley have a point about that?

4. What was Berkeley's Latin slogan? Do you think existence depends upon being perceived?

5. What obvious difficulty does Berkeley's theory face? Is it possible to have ideas that are consistent (non-contradictory) but still about non-realities?

6. What English poet declared that "whatever is, is right," and what German philosopher (with his "Principle of Sufficient Reason") agreed with the poet? Does this imply that nothing is ever wrong or bad? Is it really possible or reasonable to believe this?

7. What French champion of free speech and religious toleration wrote a satirical novel/play ridiculing the idea that everything is right (for the best)? 

8. What 1755 catastrophe deeply influenced Voltaire's philosophy? Do you have a philosophical perspective on natural catastrophes that makes rational and moral sense of them?

9. What did Voltaire mean by "cultivating our garden"? Do you agree with hin?

10. Did Hume think the human eye is so flawless in its patterned intricacy that, like Paley's watch, it constitutes powerful evidence of intelligent design? Why would an omnipotent designer design a flawed organ?

11. What was Hume's definition of "miracle"? Did he think we should usually believe others' reports of having witnessed a miracle? Where would you draw the line between events that are highly improbable and events that are impossible (according to known laws)?

12. Rousseau said we're born free but everywhere are in ____, but can liberate ourselves by submitting to what is best for the whole community, aka the _______. Are we all more free when we act not only for ourselves but for the good of the whole community (world, species)?


Weiner ch3

  1. What were Rousseau's "multitudes"? Most of all he was a ___.  Are you one?
  2. Rousseau's philosophy can be summed up in what four words? What does he claim is our "natural state"? (Note the contrast with Hobbes's "state of nature" that we previously discussed.) Do you agree more with him, with Hobbes, or with neither? Is it prudent to generalize about human nature?
  3. Who were some other peripatetics (walking philosophers) named by Weiner? This approach to thinking "gives the lie" to what myth? Do you know how Diogenes "solved" Zeno's paradoxes of motion? [See * below]
  4. How was Rousseau like Socrates? Are you, too?
  5. What is Rousseau's legacy to us? How does he contrast with Descartes? What did he foresee?


HWT

1. In what way was the idea of a separable soul a "corruption"? What French philosopher of the 17th century defended it? What Scottish skeptic of the 18th century disputed it?

2. What do Owen Flanagan's findings suggest, that contrasts with Aristotle's view of human nature?

3. If you ask an American and a Japanese about their occupation, how might they respond differently?


FL
1. What amazing theme park was erected in Brooklyn at the turn of the 20th century?

2. Who was Robert Love Taylor?

3. What was Birth of a Nation?

4. What did H.L. Mencken say about southerners?

5. What did The New Theology say about the supernatural?

6. How did Modernists reconcile science and religion?

7. What famous trial was held in Tennessee in 1925, and what did Clarence Darrow say about it, and what was its cultural impact?



 
==
Peripatetic philosophy:
The Gymnasiums of the Mind
...pondering the happy connection between philosophy and a good brisk walk.

If there is one idea intellectuals can agree upon it is that the act of ambulation – or as we say in the midwest, walking – often serves as a catalyst to creative contemplation and thought. It is a belief as old as the dust that powders the Acropolis, and no less fine. Followers of the Greek Aristotle were known as peripatetics because they passed their days strolling and mind-wrestling through the groves of the Academe. The Romans’ equally high opinion of walking was summed up pithily in the Latin proverb: “It is solved by walking.” [Solvitur ambulando, as Diogenes said to Zeno as he literally walked away in demonstrating motion and change]

Nearly every philosopher-poet worth his salt has voiced similar sentiments. Erasmus recommended a little walk before supper and “after supper do the same.” Thomas Hobbes had an inkwell built into his walking stick to more easily jot down his brainstorms during his rambles. Jean- Jacques Rousseau claimed he could only meditate when walking: “When I stop, I cease to think,” he said. “My mind only works with my legs.” Søren Kierkegaard believed he’d walked himself into his best thoughts. In his brief life Henry David Thoreau walked an estimated 250,000 miles, or ten times the circumference of earth. “I think that I cannot preserve my health and spirits,” wrote Thoreau, “unless I spend four hours a day at least – and it is commonly more than that – sauntering through the woods and over the hills and fields absolutely free from worldly engagements.” Thoreau’s landlord and mentor Ralph Waldo Emerson characterized walking as “gymnastics for the mind.”

In order that he might remain one of the fittest, Charles Darwin planted a 1.5 acre strip of land with hazel, birch, privet, and dogwood, and ordered a wide gravel path built around the edge. Called Sand-walk, this became Darwin’s ‘thinking path’ where he roamed every morning and afternoon with his white fox-terrier. Of Bertrand Russell, long-time friend Miles Malleson has written: “Every morning Bertie would go for an hour’s walk by himself, composing and thinking out his work for that day. He would then come back and write for the rest of the morning, smoothly, easily and without a single correction.”

None of these laggards, however, could touch Friedrich Nietzsche, who held that “all truly great thoughts are conceived by walking.” Rising at dawn, Nietzsche would stalk through the countryside till 11 a.m. Then, after a short break, he would set out on a two-hour hike through the forest to Lake Sils. After lunch he was off again, parasol in hand, returning home at four or five o’clock, to commence the day’s writing.

Not surprisingly, the romantic poets were walkers extraordinaire. William Wordsworth traipsed fourteen or so miles a day through the Lake District, while Coleridge and Shelley were almost equally energetic. According to biographer Leslie Stephen, “The (English) literary movement at the end of the 18th century was…due in great part, if not mainly, to the renewed practice of walking.”

Armed with such insights, one must wonder whether the recent decline in walking hasn’t led to a corresponding decline in thinking. Walking, as both a mode of transportation and a recreational activity, began to fall off noticeably with the rise of the automobile, and took a major nosedive in the 1950s. Fifty plus years of automobile-centric design has reduced the number of sidewalks and pedestrian-friendly spaces to a bare minimum (particularly in the American west). All of the benefits of walking: contemplation, social intercourse, exercise, have been willingly exchanged for the dubious advantages of speed and convenience, although the automobile alone cannot be blamed for the maddening acceleration of everyday life. The modern condition is one of hurry, a perpetual rush hour that leaves little time for meditation. No wonder then that in her history of walking, Rebecca Solnit mused that “modern life is moving faster than the speed of thought, or thoughtfulness,” which seems the antithesis of Wittgenstein’s observation that in the race of philosophy, the prize goes to the slowest.

If we were to compare the quantity and quality of thinkers of the early 20th century with those of today, one cannot help but notice the dearth of Einsteins, William Jameses, Eliots and Pounds, Freuds, Jungs, Keynes, Picassos, Stravinskys, Wittgensteins, Sartres, Deweys, Yeats and Joyces. But it would be foolish to suggest that we have no contemporaries equal to Freud, et al. That would be doing an injustice to Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Edward O. Wilson, James D. Watson, and the recently departed Stephen J. Gould. But as to their walking habits, they varied. Gould, a soft, flabby man, made light of his lack of exercise. Edward O. Wilson writes that he “walks as much as (his) body allows,” and used to jog up until his forties. Watson, the discoverer of the DNA molecule, frequently haunts the grounds of the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, particularly on weekends, and is said to be both a nature-lover and bird-watcher.

There seems no scientific basis to link the disparate acts of walking and thinking, though that didn’t stop Mark Twain from speculating that “walking is good to time the movement of the tongue by, and to keep the blood and the brain stirred up and active.” Others have concluded that walking’s two-point rhythm clears the mind for creative study and reflection....

To paraphrase Thomas Jefferson, walking remains for me the best “of all exercises.” Even so, I am full of excuses to stay put. My neighborhood has no sidewalks and it is downright dangerous to stroll the streets at night; if the threat does not come directly from thugs, then from drunken teens in speeding cars. There are certainly no Philosophers’ Walks in my hometown, as there are near the universities of Toronto, Heidelberg, and Kyoto. Nor are there any woods, forests, mountains or glens. “When we walk, we naturally go to the fields and the woods,” said Thoreau. “What would become of us, if we only walked in a garden or a mall?” I suppose I am what becomes of us, Henry.

At noon, if the weather cooperates, I may join a few other nameless office drudges on a stroll through the riverfront park. My noon walk is a brief burst of freedom in an otherwise long, dreary servitude. Though I try to reserve these solitary walks for philosophical ruminations, my subconscious doesn’t always cooperate. Often I find my thoughts to be pedestrian and worrisome in nature. I fret over money problems, or unfinished office work and my attempts to brush these thoughts away as unworthy are rarely successful. Then, again, in the evenings I sometimes take my two dachshunds for a stroll. For a dog, going for a walk is the ultimate feelgood experience. Mention the word ‘walkies’ to a wiener dog, and he is immediately transported into new dimensions of bliss. I couldn’t produce a similar reaction in my wife if I proposed that we take the Concorde to Paris for the weekend. Rather than suffer a walk, my son would prefer to have his teeth drilled.

In no way am I suggesting that all of society’s ills can be cured by a renaissance of walking. But maybe – just maybe – a renewed interest in walking may spur some fresh scientific discoveries, a unique literary movement, a new vein of philosophy. If nothing else it will certainly improve our health both physically and mentally. Of course that would mean getting out from behind the desk at noon and getting some fresh air. That would mean shutting down the television in the evenings and breathing in the Great Outdoors. And, ultimately, it would involve a change in thinking and a shift in behavior, as opposed to a change of channels and a shift into third.

© CHRISTOPHER ORLET 2004

Christopher Orlet is an essayist and book critic. His work appears often in The American Spectator, the London Guardian, and Salon.com. Visit his homepage at www.christopherorlet.net

https://philosophynow.org/issues/44/The_Gymnasiums_of_the_Mind

==

24 comments:

  1. 12. Rousseau said we're born free but everywhere are in ____, but can liberate ourselves by submitting to what is best for the whole community, aka the _______. Are we all more free when we act not only for ourselves but for the good of the whole community (world, species)?
    1: chains 2:General will. We are all more free when we act for the good of the whole community. By partially limiting freedom, you ensure everyone has an equal measure of it. In contrast, in a “state of nature” type of community where everyone acts only for himself, you would have the freedom to do anything but live in constant fear of someone exerting their will over you, rendering you freedomless.

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    1. Rousseau was kinda crazy, but this particular view strikes me as eminently sane. Total freedom that ignores the shared common good is hardly a freedom worth wanting.

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  2. Voltaire's criticism of the self-fulfilling Christian dogma is like a breath of fresh air. Saying that evil exists as a necessity, in other words that there is definite direction to the universe, is to me like saying that evolution has a conscious goal. Everything is a plan because God is perfect right? But who ever said God is perfect? didn't he get tricked by a mortal man and woman? Didn't one of his allies revolt? if he was perfect then wouldn't the universe just exist in stasis?

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    1. In Christianity, we do not think that God was "tricked" by Adam and Eve. They simply disobeyed Him, which shouldn't be considered "tricking." Additionally, while Satan did revolt, God knew that this was going to happen. It is all in His plan. He gave Satan the choice (free will) to make the decision to defy Him even though He already knew the outcome. The universe does not exist in stasis due to the fact that He has given us the free will to make out own decisions. I think that this makes Him perfect in the sense that even though He knows what we'll choose, He lets us come to our own realizations which helps us develop as humans.

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    2. And by "we," I am referring to the majority of Christians, especially ones that I know personally.

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    3. Yea, I'm going to have to agree with Carly on this one. God wasn't tricked by "mortal man and woman" as you say, because it was all by His design. He plans for things to happen that we can't explain, and we won't always understand, but that is the beauty of it. The all perfect God sees the bigger picture, and some people take comfort in the fact that they don't have to worry about the bigger picture and can just focus in the now. I know a lot of Christians personally who would also agree that, while yes it sucks not knowing why something is happening in the moment it happens, those questioning thoughts often are answered in the future when you can see what God had planned for you. Also, evil (from a Christian standpoint) exists because of the initial disobedience of man and woman (Adam and Eve). If you look at it from this perspective, God is still perfect because He allowed this evil/sin to happen.

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  3. I enjoyed Hume's argument against the perfect clockmaker: we can't see what's behind the curtain. But this still doesn't exactly refute deism to me. I don't think he was trying to directly counter religion, but rather point out all the uncertainties within it. As for his point one miracles, he seemed to be the only man with common sense in a time utterly lacking of it-- People lie, or are deceived-- show me a man walking on water, demonstrate gods presence; if he could do it back then why not now??

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    1. One important thing to note that is largely prevalent, and debunked, in the Christian religion is the idea of "seeing is believing." It is repeatedly discounted in numerous stories throughout the Bible, and even in real-life scenarios if you don't believe that the Bible is truth. For example, you can't see the wind, but you can see the effects of it- trees shaking, hair blowing, papers flipping, etc. It's the same argument with God, you can't see Him currently, but you ("you" meaning Christians) know He is there because you have seen the effects that He has on both your life and other's lives. Besides, isn't one of the biggest parts of religion just having faith? If you can't have faith in things that you can't see but can prove, how can you have faith in anything around you? I think many Christians would state that the most evidence you need to demonstrate God's presence is how He has changed our lives and delivered us from trials that we've overcome.

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  4. 1. How did Samuel Johnson "refute" Berkeley's theory? Did he succeed? Why or why not?
    - Johnson claimed to have refuted Berkeley's theory by kicking a rock in the street and proving that it physically existed because it hurt his foot; however that did not truly refute the theory, because part of the idea of a rock is that it is hard and would hurt your foot if you kicked it, so in the same way he could've been simply experiencing the idea of the rock.

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  5. 4.) ‘Esse est percipi’ – to be (or exist) is to be perceived. This is becoming increasingly more accurate as time passes. As the social media age becomes decidedly entrenched in our society's function, we see in real time the fusion of audience and performer. There appears to be an intensifying desire in each successive generation to perform in some way, and social media fully exploits that desire, as well as motivates it. For most people, there is no off switch. They upload their every move through snapshots onto these platforms. They watch their own lives go by on a screen. Which in turn raises the question of whether this way of "being" even allows the opportunity simply TO be.

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  6. FL 1
    A slavery theme park was erected in Brooklyn and called “Black America.” Five hundred people of color were recruited to play the role of slaves by picking cotton. It aimed to show the kind of work that slaves did and how their lives were actually not bad.

    It is kind of alarming how quickly people believed the lie of the “Old South” and its glory, considering that slavery had only ended three decades before. I would like to say that nowadays we are not as easily influenced or brainwashed, but that wouldn’t be true. I believe the internet is a tool that allows us to have a world of knowledge at our fingertips, while simultaneously playing a major role in our brainwashing.

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  7. FL 2
    Robert Love Taylor was a former Tennessee governor and U.S. senator. He went around the country talking about how amazing Old South was.

    I am thinking the reason what he was said was so accepted was because people wanted it to be true. I assume it was very difficult for people to grasp that the horrors of slavery plagued their country for many decades. So, I’m sure many wished that slavery was just a misunderstanding and that it wasn’t as awful as it was.

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  8. FL 3
    Birth of Nation was a 1915 film directed by D.W. Griffith. It was basically a love letter to white supremacy and the Ku Klux Klan. Fantasyland states that it was the first movie to be shown at the White House, which is actually really embarrassing for America. I am glad that we’ve made some progress since then. It’s so weird how everyone’s minds were wiped clean of the reality of slavery and even things like Uncle Tom’s Cabin, which was incredibly popular some decades before.

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    1. I remember when I first learned about Birth of a Nation. The fact that it was played in the primary location of our government is crazy to me. I think it is important to know about it, not to praise it, but to study it and why it was so loved. I feel like when we understand it in the context of time, you can better come to an understanding of why people used to believe what they did.

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  9. Hannah Ferreira H01
    1. How did Samuel Johnson "refute" Berkeley's theory? Did he succeed? Why or why not?
    He refuted Berkeley’s theory by kicking a stone hard on the street and asserting that material things were not just ideas because he could feel the stone. I wouldn’t say he necessarily succeeded, though I do not believe that material things are just ideas. It doesn’t totally refute the idea.

    2. What made Berkeley an idealist, and an immaterialist? Are you one, the other, both, neither?
    He believed everything that existed was an idea and he was an immaterialist because he denied that material things existed. I am neither, I don’t really see the logic in this.

    9. What did Voltaire mean by "cultivating our garden"? Do you agree with hin?
    Voltaire said cultivating our garden was doing something useful for humanity. I agree with him, I think this is a great idea. Pondering is great but you have to put your beliefs into action sometimes.

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    1. I personally don't understand either, but especially not immaterialism. I trust my senses, so when I can physically feel that something is there, I believe it is there. If material things did not exist, we could not exist. If we did not exist, I couldn't be typing and coming up with thoughts.

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  10. LHP 7
    What French champion of free speech and religious toleration wrote a satirical novel/play ridiculing the idea that everything is right (for the best)? Francois-Marie Arouet, better known as Voltaire

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  11. Adriana Ramirez Seis H03 LHP

    4. What was Berkeley's Latin slogan? Do you think existence depends upon being perceived?
    Berkeley’s latin slogan was “Esse est percipi,” meaning to exist is to be perceived. He argued that objects’ existence is dependent upon other’s perception of them. I do not agree that existence depends upon being perceived and I could give many examples as to why not. Early in pregnancy, many women do not know they are pregnant. They do not ‘perceive’ the fetus developing in their uterus. That does not mean the fetus isn’t there/doesn’t exist. Another example is the bottom of the ocean. Say there is a species of fish that can only survive at the deepest depths of the Mariana Trench. We have no way of studying them or knowing they are there. Us not knowing about them does not mean they don’t exist.

    5. What obvious difficulty does Berkeley's theory face? Is it possible to have ideas that are consistent (non-contradictory) but still about non-realities?
    He tries to compensate for his argument being nonsensical by arguing that God perceives everything. While I am a Christian and do believe God exists and is all knowing, not everyone does. Someone could argue that since they can’t perceive God, by Berkeley’s own logic, He must not exist. It is possible for ideas about non-realities to be consistent, but this would not be an example of that. His theory is self-defeating. 

6. What English poet declared that "whatever is, is right," and what German philosopher (with his "Principle of Sufficient Reason") agreed with the poet? Does this imply that nothing is ever wrong or bad? Is it really possible or reasonable to believe this?
    Alexander Pope declared “whatever is, is right,” and German Philosopher Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz agreed with that idea in “Principle of Sufficient Reason.” At first glance, this seems pretty ridiculous, especially to someone who does not believe in God. I was thrown off at first until I sit and thought and realized I actually agree. I do believe that everything that happens serves a purpose, even if we cannot see it in the moment. Upon reflection, I can find many things that were very bad in the moment that produced something good, and I believe other’s could as well upon honest examination of their life. This does not mean that the thing that happened is not bad or did not cause any harm. An example I can think of was the lockdowns during COVID. That was a very scary and isolating time for a lot of people. Many got sick and some even died. Before the lockdowns, I was going through a lot of anxiety and depression. I was drinking to excess and vaping and going to parties. The lockdowns took away my access to those things and forced me to think about what was really important. After the lockdowns were lifted, I started going to church again and now I’ve been sober for 3.5 years. Something really good coming out of those circumstances does not negate how scary it was in the moment. 

7. What French champion of free speech and religious toleration wrote a satirical novel/play ridiculing the idea that everything is right (for the best)? 
    François-Marie Arouet, more commonly known as Voltaire, ridiculed this idea in his work titled “Candide.” 


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  12. Adriana Ramirez Speis H03 LHP
    9. What did Voltaire mean by "cultivating our garden"? Do you agree with him?
    Voltaire believed that cultivating our garden was doing good works for humanity/society as opposed to strictly thinking and pondering these good things. I do believe that actions speak louder than thoughts. You can think long and hard about the cure to cancer, but if you never put it into action, what good are you doing? 

10. Did Hume think the human eye is so flawless in its patterned intricacy that, like Paley's watch, it constitutes powerful evidence of intelligent design? Why would an omnipotent designer design a flawed organ?
    David Hume did not buy into the Design Argument, challenging it in his “Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding.” I don’t believe the human eye alone proves God’s existence, but I do view our bodies as incredibly intricate and fascinating. I love learning about the human body, both its structures and its functions. When I think about all our bodies do for us and what they’re capable of and all of the work it takes just to keep us alive, I am in awe. I don’t think it is accidental. I think we were designed by an intelligent creator, God. So why would he design a flawed organ? One, going back to question 6, I do think everything happens for a reason, including blindness. Two, God is perfection and we are not god. It makes sense we aren’t perfect. Good news is that we will be!

    12. Rousseau said we're born free but everywhere are in ____, but can liberate ourselves by submitting to what is best for the whole community, aka the _______. Are we all more free when we act not only for ourselves but for the good of the whole community (world, species)?
    Rousseau said we’re born free and everywhere are in chains. We can liberate ourselves by submitting to what is best for the whole community, aka the General Will. I think that depends on how you define free. Ultimately, if you go against the good of the community and murder people cause you want to, you may end up in jail or death row, lacking freedom, but in the moment of killing you were free to do what you wanted. I think functioning within a society gives us the freedom to explore our interests and creativity in a safe environment without fear of harm.

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  13. H02 - LHP 12
    Rousseau said we're born free but everywhere are in chains, but can liberate ourselves by submitting to what is best for the whole community, aka the general will.
    I think that this varies depending on people's definition of freedom.

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  14. 1. How did Samuel Johnson "refute" Berkeley's theory? Did he succeed? Why or why not? He kicked a stone in the street and said “I refute it thus.” By doing so he was trying to prove that material things do in fact exist and don’t merely composed of ideas because he could feel the stone. However, Berkeley rebuttled by saying that this proved nothing except for the existence of the idea of a hard stone and the sensations of it. I do not agree with this theory and side with Samuel Johnson.

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  15. 2. What made Berkeley an idealist, and an immaterialist? Are you one, the other, both, neither? Berkeley was both an idealist meaning he believed that everything that exists is just ideas and also an immaterialist because he believed that material things didn’t exist. I am neither because I believe that material things exist in reality; although the way we experience them may vary person to person.

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  16. 4. What was Berkeley's Latin slogan? Do you think existence depends upon being perceived? His Latin slogain was “Esse est percipi” meaning “to be (or exist) is to be perceived." I don’t agree that existence depends upon being perceived. I think that a whole world exists out there and since I’m not the size of the Earth, I can’t experience it all at once, but I can certainly experience it parts of it at different times.

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  17. 5. What obvious difficulty does Berkeley's theory face? Is it possible to have ideas that are consistent (non-contradictory) but still about non-realities? The difficulty is explaining “how we can ever be mistaken about anything,” meaning how we can distinguish between real objects and optical illusions. I think it is definitely possible, it’s just hard to think about in theory. I think the simplest answer is usually the right one, but in this case, Berkeley’s theory unnecessarily complicates things and creates loopholes and exceptions to fit his theory to reality.

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