Available Formats
Berkeley's 'Principles of Human Knowledge': A Reader's Guide
By (Author) Dr Alasdair Richmond
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
1st March 2009
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
192
Paperback
208
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
Berkeley's Principles of Human Knowledge is a key text in the history of British Empiricism and 18th-century thought. As a free-standing systematic exposition of Berkeley's ideas, this is a hugely important and influential text, central to any undergraduate's study of the history of philosophy.
"Richmond's Reader's Guide is the perfect companion for those students approaching Berkeley's Principles of Human Knowledge for the first time. In a clear, unpretentious and often unobtrusively witty style, Richmond takes the reader through the work paragraph by paragraph, explaining its meaning, often by appeal to Berkeley's notebooks and other works. He asks the reader stimulating questions to help them engage with the text, and usefully sketches Berkeley's intellectual background and the fortunes of the work's reception. This is a book truly written with students in mind, and all the better for that." - Dr Peter Kail, University of Oxford, UK
Alasdair Richmond is Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh, UK.