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  1. Three Dialogues George Berkeley First Dialogue Hyl: That is what I desire. Phil: What do you mean by ‘sensible things’? Hyl: Things that are perceived by the senses. Can you imagine that I mean anything else? Phil: I’m sorry, but it may greatly shorten our enquiry if I have a clear grasp of your notions. Bear with me, then, while

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  2. Spinoza: The Ethics. Genevieve Lloyd. Taylor & Francis US, 2001 - Philosophy - 410 pages. These volumes provide a comprehensive selection of high quality critical discussions of Spinoza's...

  3. Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous in Opposition to Sceptics and Atheists The Works of George Berkeley, Bishop of Cloyne: The principles of human knowledge.

  4. examines the philosophical background to Spinoza’s thought and the dialogues in which Spinoza was engaged – with his contemporaries (including Descartes and Hobbes), with an-cient thinkers (especially the Stoics), and with his Jewish rationalist forebears. He explains the doctrines and arguments

  5. Berkeley breaks his book up into three separate sections, or dialogues. In the first dialogue he tries to demonstrate that materialism—or the belief in the existence of mind-independent material objects—is incoherent, untenable, and leads ultimately to skepticism.

  6. Spinoza: Ethics / Leibniz: The Monadology. / Berkeley: Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous (Annotated) by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and George Berkeley available in Trade Paperback on Powells.Regarding Bertrand Russell (Nobel Laureate, 1950) in "The Problems of Philosophy" (1912),...

  7. Ethics, Demonstrated in Geometrical Order (Latin: Ethica, ordine geometrico demonstrata), usually known as the Ethics, is a philosophical treatise written in Latin by Baruch Spinoza (Benedictus de Spinoza).