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:''This article is about the '''philosophical''' notion of Idealism. Idealism is also a term in [[Idealism in international relations theory|international relations theory]] and in [[Idealism (Christian eschatology)|Christian eschatology]].''
 
:''This article is about the '''philosophical''' notion of Idealism. Idealism is also a term in [[Idealism in international relations theory|international relations theory]] and in [[Idealism (Christian eschatology)|Christian eschatology]].''
  
'''Idealism''' is an approach to [[philosophy|philosophical enquiry]] which asserts that direct and immediate knowledge can only be had of ideas or mental pictures. Objects that are the basis of these ideas can only be known indirectly or mediately. As a foundation for [[cosmology]], or an approach to understanding the existence, idealism is often contrasted with ''[[materialism]]'', both belonging to the class of [[monism|monist]] as opposed to [[dualism|dualist]] or [[pluralism|pluralist]] [[ontology|ontologies]]. (Note that this contrast between idealism and materialism is approximately as to whether the [[substance]] of the [[world]] is at base [[mental]] or [[physical]] — it has nothing to do with thinking that things should be [[ideal]]ized, or with coveting goods.)
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'''Idealism''' is a term used to describe a wide variety of philosophical positions. One can distinguish two general senses: A Platonic sense, and a modern sense. Idealism in the [[Plato|Platonic]] sense involves the claim that ideal things occupy a metaphysically privileged position in the universe. Idealism in the modern sense centers around the claim that at least large portions of reality (in particular, the experienced physical world) are [[metaphysics|metaphysically]] based in something mental (minds and their ideas or representations). Such a view stands in stark opposition with "[[materialism|materialist]]" views of reality, which claim that mental entities and properties are somehow based or grounded in non-mental, material entities and properties, of the sort with which physics is concerned (there are positions between the two extremes, such as [[dualism]]).
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Though both types of idealism are first and foremost metaphysical positions, their proponents have typically tried to motivate them using [[epistemology|epistemological]] considerations. Plato's concern with the ideal realm appears to have been largely motivated by questions concerning knowledge. Epistemological arguments play a central role in the defenses of modern idealism presented by the two most prominent idealists in modern Western philosophy: George [[Berkeley]] and Immanuel [[Kant]]. Though there are relations between the two types of idealism, this article will discuss them separately.
  
The approach to idealism by [[Western world|Western]] philosophers has been different from that of Eastern thinkers. In much of Western thought (though not in such major Western thinkers as [[Plato]] and [[Hegel]]) ''the ideal'' relates to direct [[knowledge]] of [[subjective]] mental [[ideas]], or [[image]]s. It is then usually juxtaposed with ''[[realism]]'' in which the [[real]] is said to have [[absolute]] [[existence]] prior to and independent of our knowledge. [[Epistemology|Epistemological]] idealists might insist that the only things which can be directly ''known for certain'' are ideas. In Eastern thought, as reflected in [[Hindu idealism]], the concept of ''idealism'' takes on the meaning of [[consciousness]], essentially the living consciousness of an all-pervading ''[[God]]'', as the basis of all [[phenomena]]. A type of [[Asian]] idealism is [[Consciousness-only|Buddhist idealism]].
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==Platonic idealism==
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In Book VII of the ''Republic,'' [[Plato]] presented his famous "Allegory of the Cave," which stands as one of the most vivid images of Platonic idealism. Taken together with Book VI's sun metaphor, the picture that emerges is roughly as follows: Certain entities ("Forms") stand at the basis of reality. These things are ideal, not in a pictoral sense, but rather in the sense that they represent a sort of perfection. For example, the Form of the Good is the only entity that is entirely good. Other entities have some degree of goodness only by "participating" in the Form. Sensible objects have the properties they do participating imperfectly in a large number of Forms. This "participation" makes them somehow less real than the Forms, so that Plato describes them as mere shadows or reflections. Throughout the relevant discussion, Plato is clear that the metaphysical relation between sensible objects and Forms perfectly parallels (and, it is safe to assume, was inspired by) the epistemic relations between perceptual awareness of sensory particulars and intellectual awareness of abstract universals.
  
==History==
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In the ''Republic,'' the relation of the Forms to the rest of reality received little more than a metaphorical explanation. The Forms were somehow (perhaps causally) responsible for the sensible world, but Plato gave no suggestion that illumination was possible on that front. In his (probably later) dialogue ''Timaeus,'' however, Plato presented a creation story that suggested a picture more in line with most religious orthodoxy (both as Plato knew it, and as what it would become). In the ''Timaeus,'' the world is created when a powerful demiurge (meaning "craftsman") shapes the physical world in the images of the Forms, which act as blueprints.
'''Idealism''' names a number of philosophical positions with quite different tendencies and implications.
 
  
===Idealism in the East===
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The ''Timaeus'' was one of the most influential of Plato's works for the Christian Platonists. Heavily influenced by that account, [[Augustine]] rejected the idea that God merely ''shaped'' the world at some point in time, and rather held that God timelessly created the world. Such a timeless creation was in many ways closer to the picture originally presented in the ''Republic''. Augustine also rejected the picture of the Forms as independent of and prior to God, instead locating such eternal archetypes in God alone.
Several [[Hinduism|Hindu traditions]] and [[History of Buddhist schools|schools of Buddhism]] can be accurately characterized as idealist. Some of the Buddhist schools are called "[[Consciousness-only]]" schools as they focus on consciousness without a God or soul.  
 
  
===Idealism in the West===
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Versions of such a view lasted even into the modern era. The great German philosopher [[Leibniz]] held that God's understanding contained ideas of all possible things, and that his act of creation was simply him actualizing the combination of things that he knew to be best.
====Antiphon====
 
In his chief work ''Truth'', [[Antiphon (person)|Antiphon]] wrote: "[[Time]] is a [[thought]] or a [[measure]], not a [[substance]]".  This presents time as an ideational, internal, mental operation, rather than a real, external object.
 
  
====Plato====
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==Modern idealism==
{{main|Platonic idealism}}
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===Overview of modern idealism===
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In the first section of his 1783 work, ''Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics,'' [[Kant]] defined "genuine" idealism as consisting in the assertion that, "there are none but thinking beings; all other things which we believe are perceived in intuitions are nothing but representations in the thinking beings, to which no object external to them corresponds" (4:288-89 in the Akademie edition). The view described here applies as well to [[Leibniz]] as to [[Berkeley]]. It involves a sweeping claim about the nature of reality—namely, that the very ''notion'' of something entirely non-mental existing is either incoherent (Berkeley) or else cannot survive philosophical reflection (Leibniz).
  
[[Plato]] proposed an idealist theory as a solution to the [[problem of universals]]. A universal is that which all things share in virtue of having some particular property. So for example the wall, the moon and a blank sheet of paper are all white; ''white'' is the universal that all white things share. Plato argued that it is universals, [[The Forms]], or [[Platonic Ideals]] that are real, not specific individual things. Confusingly, because this idea asserts that these mental entities are ''real'', it is also called ''[[Platonic realism]]''; in this sense ''realism'' contrasts with ''[[nominalism]]'', the notion that mental abstractions are merely names without an independent existence. Nevertheless, it is a form of idealism because it asserts the primacy of the idea of universals over material things. <!-- More on maths here ? —>
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Kant offered this definition, however, in order to distance himself from such positions (when writing the ''Prolegomena,'' he was reeling from reviews of his 1781 ''Critique of Pure Reason'' which charged him with merely restating Berkeley's position). His view, which he described as "transcendental" or "critical" idealism (4:293-94), did ''not'' involve the claim that all non-mental things must exist in representations.
  
====Plotinus====
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The distinction Kant aimed to draw can be turned into a useful general point. It is clearest to understand the term "idealism" in a relative sense and an absolute sense. In the relative sense, a philosopher is an idealist ''about'' a certain sort of entity or property, where this simply means that she believes that the existence and nature of that entity or property ultimately reduces to facts about minds and their representations. Given this, certain forms of idealism should be generally accepted—for instance, we might be idealists about a certain fictional character. Kant, then, was an idealist about a certain set of properties (including space and time), but not about others (for instance, the property of being able to affect other entities).
[[Schopenhauer]] wrote of this [[Neoplatonist]] philosopher: "With [[Plotinus]] there even appears, probably for the first time in [[Western philosophy]], ''idealism'' that had long been current in the [[East]] even at that time, for it taught ([[Enneads]], iii, lib. vii, c.10) that the [[soul]] has made the [[world]] by stepping from [[eternity]] into [[time]], with the explanation: 'For there is for this [[universe]] no other place than the soul or [[mind]]' (neque est alter hujus universi locus quam anima), indeed the ideality of time is expressed in the words: 'We should not accept time outside the soul or mind' (oportet autem nequaquam extra animam tempus accipere)." (''Parerga and Paralipomena'', Volume I, "Fragments for the History of Philosophy," § 7)
 
  
====Malebranche====
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The absolute sense of "idealism," then, is relative idealism about ''all'' entities and properties. This is then a much stronger position, and one that cannot be conclusively argued for one entity or property at a time.
  
[[Malebranche]] a student of the Cartesian School of Rationalism disagreed that if the only things that we know for certain are the ideas within our mind, then the existence of the external world would be dubious and known only indirectly. He declared instead that the real external world is actually God. All activity only appears to occur in the external world. In actuality, it is the activity of God. For Malebranche, we directly know internally the ideas in our mind. Externally, we directly know God's operations. This kind of idealism led to the pantheism of [[Spinoza]].
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===[[George Berkeley]]===
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Inspired by the work of the French philosopher and theologian Nicolas [[Malebranche]], the Irish Bishop George Berkeley believed that philosophical positions that posited absolutely non-mental entities in the universe (in particular, [[Descartes|Cartesian]] material substance) were responsible for the spread of atheism and skepticism across Europe in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. According to a philosophical picture such as that advanced by John [[Locke]], material substance was the crucial aspect of the physical world, and was responsible for causing representations in the mind. It could not, however, be directly perceived, and could only be known indirectly through the representations it caused.
  
====George Berkeley====
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But if material substance was at the core of physical reality and could not be directly known, then, Berkeley believed, it was inevitable that people would come to doubt whether it existed, and thereby come to question the reality of the world of everyday objects. Worse, in his view, this view described a universe that seemed capable of operating independently of God. Were people to become convinced of such a picture, it was inevitable that they would come to wonder if they had any reason for believing in God at all.
[[George Berkeley|Bishop Berkeley]], in seeking to find out what we could know with certainty, decided that our knowledge must be based on our [[perception]]s. This led him to conclude that there was indeed no "real" knowable object behind one's perception, that what was "real" was the perception itself. This is characterised by Berkeley's slogan: "Esse est aut percipi aut percipere" or "To be is to be perceived or to perceive", meaning that something only exists, in the particular way that it is seen to exist, when it is being perceived (seen, felt etc.) by an observing subject.
 
  
This [[subjective idealism]] or [[dogmatic idealism]] led to his placing the full weight of [[theory of justification|justification]] on our perceptions. This left Berkeley with the problem, common to other forms of idealism, of explaining how it is that each of us apparently has much the same sort of perceptions of an object. He solved this problem by having [[God]] intercede, as the immediate cause of all of our perceptions.
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On the other hand, if people believed (1) that all that existed were minds and their representations, (2) that the world of everyday objects was simply composed of representations, and (3) that most of their representations were directly caused by God, then the source of those temptations towards skepticism and atheism would dry up.
  
[[Schopenhauer]] wrote: "Berkeley was, therefore, the first to treat the subjective starting-point really seriously and to demonstrate irrefutably its absolute necessity. He is the father of idealism...." (''Parerga and Paralipomena'', Vol. I, "Fragments for the History of Philosophy," § 12)
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In his two major works, the ''Principles of Human Knowledge'' (1710) and ''Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous'' (1713), Berkeley presented two general arguments for his idealism: The first based on the differing representations we have of supposedly unchanging objects, and the second based on the very conceivability of something non-mental.
  
====Arthur Collier====
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The first general argument might be schematized as follows: Our perceptions of objects change with changes in us (e.g. objects appear different shapes from different perspective angles), but, on the view that there exists some non-mental material substance, the underlying substance needn't change with (e.g.) changes in our position. Yet there is no non-arbitrary way of determining which of those changing perceptions is ''correct,'' in the sense of revealing the true nature of the object. Because those perceptions are often incompatible, they cannot all reveal the nature of the object, but since they are all on par, the only reasonable conclusion is that none of them do. But that, Berkeley claimed, is obviously absurd; ''of course'' human perceptions say something about the nature of the object. That's why people use their perception in the first place. Given this, he thought that the only reasonable alternative was to identify the object with one's perceptions of it, thereby allowing one direct epistemic access to it (this relied on the uncontroversial assumption that people have direct access to their perceptions).
[[Arthur Collier]] published the same assertions that were made by [[George Berkeley|Berkeley]]. However, there seemed to have been no influence between the two contemporary writers. Collier claimed that the represented image of an external object is the only knowable reality. Matter, as a cause of the representative image, is unthinkable and therefore nothing to us. An external world, as absolute matter, unrelated to an observer, does not exist for human perceivers. As an appearance in a mind, the universe cannot exist as it appears if there is no perceiving mind.  
 
  
Collier was influenced by [[John Norris]]'s ([[1701]]) ''An Essay Towards the Theory of the Ideal or Intelligible World''. The idealist statements by Collier were generally dismissed by readers who were not able to reflect on the distinction between a mental idea or image and the object that it represents.
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The first argument, however, is not nearly strong enough to establish absolute idealism, which was Berkeley's aim. It leaves open the possibility that the objects people perceive have an unknown reality, as well as the possibility that there might be unperceivable and non-mental objects. To rule out those possibilities, Berkeley presented another line of argument. Accepting a strong form of [[empiricism]], Berkeley claimed that the only understanding of "existence" one can have must be one derived from his experiences. Human experiences, however, are all of one's own mind and one's own representations. But in that case, the only ''meaning'' that existence can have is "to have a representation or be a representation."  Material substance, however, was supposed to be something that was neither a representation nor a possessor of representations. The conclusion is that "material substance exists" is in fact a contradiction.
  
====Jonathan Edwards====
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===[[Kant]]===
[[Jonathan Edwards]], an American theologian, went to [[Yale University]] in [[1716]] at the age of thirteen. After reading [[Locke]]'s doctrine of ideas, he kept a notebook entitled "Mind." In it, he wrote, at the age of fourteen, that the only things that are real are minds. He contended that [[matter]] exists only as an [[idea]] in a mind. Due to his theological manner of thinking, he asserted that space is God, due to its infinity. After adolescence, he never elaborated on these early idealistic notes.
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Berkeley's second argument (presented above) relied heavily on the claim that all of one's meaningful thoughts must be based in direct experience. While this thought has appealed to some philosophers (perhaps most notably in the twentieth century, the [[logical positivism|logical positivists]]), it strikes most people as highly problematic. For instance, people seem to be able to think thoughts with universal and necessary content (for instance, all events have a cause), even though experience alone seems insufficient to yield ideas of universality or necessity.
  
====Immanuel Kant====
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Motivated by just such thoughts, Kant rejected the strong empiricist assumptions that underlay Berkeley's most radical arguments. Nevertheless, in his ''Critique of Pure Reason,'' he advanced arguments for forms of relative idealism about almost all qualities of objects, including their spatiality, temporality, and all sensible qualities.
[[Immanuel Kant]] held that the mind shapes the world as we perceive it to take the form of space-and-time.  Kant focused on the idea drawn from British [[empiricism]] (and its philosophers such as [[John Locke|Locke]], [[George Berkeley|Berkeley]], and [[David Hume|Hume]]) that all we can know is the mental impressions, or ''[[phenomena]]'', that an outside world which may or may not exist independently creates in our minds; our minds can never perceive that outside world directly.  Kant's postscript to this added that the mind is not a [[blank slate]] (contra [[John Locke]]), but rather comes equipped with categories for organising our sense impressions.  This Kantian sort of idealism opens up a world of abstractions (i.e., the universal categories minds use to understand phenomena) to be explored by reason, but in sharp contrast to Plato's, confirms uncertainties about a (un)knowable world outside our own minds.  We cannot approach the ''[[noumenon]]'', the "Thing in Itself" ([[German language|German]]: ''Ding an Sich'') outside our own mental world.  (Kant's idealism goes by the counterintuitive name of ''[[transcendental idealism]]''.)
 
  
====Fichte====
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With respect to space and time, Kant believed that some form of idealism was required to explain the vast store of ''a priori'' knowledge people have concerning the spatial and temporal properties of objects (the clearest example being geometry). How, Kant wondered, could people know, as they doubtless do, that all objects they could encounter have a spatial relation to each other and can be described mathematically?  After all, people have experienced only a minute fraction of what exists, so they are hardly in a place to draw any inductive inference to such a conclusion. The only way one could explain this bulk of necessary, universal knowledge, Kant believed, was if space and time only existed as representations in the mind that one ''imposes'' on objects she encounters.
[[Johann Gottlieb Fichte|Johann Fichte]] denied Kant's noumenon, and made the claim that consciousness made its own foundation, that the mental ego of the self relied on no external, and that an external of any kind would be the same as admitting a real material. He was the first to make the attempt at a presuppositionless theory of knowledge, wherein nothing outside of thinking would be assumed to exist outside the initial analysis of concept. So that conception could be solely grounded in itself, and assume nothing without deduction from there first, what he called a [[Wissenschaftslehre]]. (This      stand is very similar to [[Giovanni Gentile]]'s [[Actual Idealism]], except that Gentile's theory goes further by denying a ground for even an ego or self made from thinking.)
 
  
====Hegel====
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Nevertheless, Kant was clear that this does not mean that the objects people encounter only ''exist'' in their representations. The objects exist on their own—it is rather a certain set of their properties that are ideal. They almost certainly have other properties beyond those people encounter, and those properties needn't have any relation to anything mental. Kant often puts this distinction in terms of a contrast between "things as they appear to us" and "things as they are in themselves."  By emphasizing ignorance of how things are in themselves, Kant hoped to rule out the possibility that natural science (which has to do only with things as they appear) could disprove the existence of freedom of the will or the existence of God.
[[Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel|Hegel]], another philosopher whose system has been called ''idealism'', argued in his ''Science of Logic'' (1812-1814) that finite qualities are not fully "real," because they depend on other finite qualities to determine them. Qualitative ''infinity'', on the other hand, would be more self-determining, and hence would have a better claim to be called fully real. Similarly, finite natural things are less "real"—because they're less self-determining—than spiritual things like morally responsible people, ethical communities, and God. So any doctrine, such as materialism, that asserts that finite qualities or merely natural objects are fully real, is mistaken. Hegel called his philosophy ''[[absolute idealism]]'', in contrast to the "[[subjective idealism]]" of Berkeley and the "[[transcendental idealism]]" of Kant and Fichte, which were not based (like  Hegel's idealism) on a critique of the finite. The "idealists" listed above whose philosophy Hegel's philosophy most closely resembles are Plato and Plotinus. None of these three thinkers associates their idealism with the epistemological thesis that what we know are "ideas" in our minds.
 
  
====Schopenhauer====
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===German idealism===
In the first volume of his ''Parerga and Paralipomena'', [[Schopenhauer]] wrote his "Sketch of a [[History]] of the Doctrine of the [[Ideal]] and the [[Real]]". He defined the ideal as being mental pictures that constitute subjective [[knowledge]]. The ideal, for him, is what can be attributed to our own minds. The images in our head are what comprise the ideal. Schopenhauer emphasized that we are restricted to our own [[consciousness]]. The [[world]] that appears there is only a [[representation]] or mental picture of objects. We directly and immediately know only representations. All objects that are external to the mind are known indirectly through the mediation of our [[mind]].  
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Kant's idealism was enormously influential. Many of his successors, however, believed that his insistence on the existence of things in themselves showed that he had not taken his own insight concerning knowledge seriously enough. If knowledge only concerns representations, they thought, how could one even know the ''possibility'' of something outside of those representations?  How could that even make sense?  In response to these worries, absolute idealism surfaced again in Germany in the work of such thinkers as [[Fichte]] and [[Hegel]]. This issued in the era known as "German Idealism."
  
Schopenhauer's history is an account of the [[concept]] of the "ideal" in its meaning as "ideas in a subject's mind." In this sense, "ideal" means "ideational" or "existing in the mind as an image." He does not refer to the other meaning of "ideal" as being qualities of the highest perfection and excellence.
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Fichte and Hegel's views are present in some of the most difficult pieces of philosophy ever produced (e.g. Fichte's ''Theory of Science'' or ''Wissenschaftslehre'' and Hegel's ''Phenomenology of Spirit''). Yet the core idea is relatively simple: Whereas Berkeley believed that some supremely powerful mind (God) was needed to explain the varied perceptions humans experience, and Kant explained experience in terms of interactions with things whose inner natures humans were unaware of, Fichte (in his later work) and Hegel believed that such explanations could come from features internal to the force that manifests itself in finite minds (some sort of general mental force).
  
====British idealism====
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The advantage of such a move was that there was no longer an appeal to anything as supernatural as God or things in themselves. The disadvantage is the resulting difficulty in explaining how features of one's own mind could possibly account for the wildly varying and deeply complex set of representations we experience.
[[British idealism]] enjoyed ascendancy in English-speaking philosophy in the later part of the 19th century. [[F. H. Bradley]] of [[Merton College]], [[Oxford university|Oxford]], saw reality as a [[monism|monistic]] whole, which is apprehended through "feeling", a state in which there is no distinction between the perception and the thing perceived. Bradley was the apparent target of [[G. E. Moore]]'s radical rejection of idealism.  
 
  
[[J. M. E. McTaggart]] of [[University of Cambridge|Cambridge University]], argued that minds alone exist, and that they only relate to each other through love. [[Space]], [[time]] and material objects are for McTaggart unreal. He argued, for instance, in ''[[The Unreality of Time]]'' that it was not possible to produce a coherent account of a sequence of events in time, and that therefore time is an illusion.
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Despite this daunting philosophical challenge, the philosophical picture proposed by the German Idealists was extremely influential. It enjoyed a surge of popularity in English speaking countries in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as present in such figures as [[F.H. Bradley]], J.M.E. [[McTaggart]], and [[Josiah Royce]].
  
American philosopher [[Josiah Royce]] described himself as an [[objective idealism|objective idealist]].  
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===Criticisms of idealism===
<!-- relationship with Husserl, phenomenology, existentialism, post modernism —>
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The most natural response to idealism is that it violates some tenet of common sense. Berkeley was well aware of this, and spent much of his ''Three Dialogues'' attempted to argue to the contrary.
  
====Karl Pearson====
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Yet a sustained philosophical attack on idealism was made (largely in response to [[Hegel]]ian idealism) by the British philosopher [[G. E. Moore]] in the early twentieth century ([[Bertrand Russell]] made a parallel attack). Moore directly attacked that essential assumption of idealism, that what people are directly aware of are their representations. Instead, Moore proposed that people should understand the objects of their thoughts to be ''propositions,'' where propositions can be understood as states of affairs constituted by genuinely non-mental objects in the world. Such a picture has become the dominant one in contemporary [[analytic philosophy]], and idealism is not often counted as a viably philosophical position. Nevertheless, defenders of idealism may well note that Moore's alternative picture is no more self-evident than the picture it meant to replace, so that the matter is far from settled.
In ''[[The Grammar of Science]]'', Preface to the 2nd Edition, [[1900]], [[Karl Pearson]] wrote, "There are many signs that a sound idealism is surely replacing, as a basis for natural philosophy, the crude [[materialism]] of the older physicists." This book influenced [[Albert Einstein|Einstein]]'s regard for the importance of the observer in scientific measurements. In § 5 of that book, Pearson asserted that "...science is in reality a classification and analysis of the contents of the [[mind]]...." Also, "...the field of science is much more [[consciousness]] than an external world."
 
  
===Criticism of Idealism===
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==References==
====Immanuel Kant====
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* Augustine. 2007. ''Confessionum libri tredecim (Confessions).'' Trans. F.J. Sheed. Indianapolis: Hackett. ISBN 0872208168
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* Augustine. 2003. ''De civitate Dei (The City of God).'' Trans. Penguin Classics. Harmondsworth: Penguin. ISBN 0140448942
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* Baldwin, Thomas. 2003. "Moore, George Edward." In E. Craig, ed. ''Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy.'' London: Routledge. ISBN 0415073103
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* Berkeley, George. 1988. ''Principles of Human Knowledge/Three Dialogues.'' Roger Woolhouse, ed. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 0192835491
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* Fichte, Johann Gottlieb. 1992. ''Foundations of the Transcendental Philosophy (Wissenschaftslehre) Nova Methodo (1796-1799).'' Daniel Breazeale, ed. and trans. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
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* Hegel, G.W.F. 1977. ''Phenomenology of Spirit.'' Trans, A.V. Miller. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198245300
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* Kant, Immanuel. 1977. ''Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics.''  Trans. James W. Ellington. Indianapolis: Hackett. ISBN 9780915144334 
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* Kant, Immanuel. 1963. ''Critique of Pure Reason.'' Trans. N. K. Smith. London: MacMillan & Co.
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* Matthews, Gareth B. 1998. "Augustine." In E. Craig, ed. ''Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy.'' London: Routledge. ISBN 0415073103
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* Moore, G.E. 1993. ''Selected Writings.'' T. Baldwin, ed. London: Routledge. ISBN 041509853X
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* Plato. 1997. ''Complete Works.'' John M. Cooper, ed. Indianapolis, Hackett. ISBN 0872203492
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* Sprigge, T.L.S. 1998. "Idealism." In E. Craig, ed. ''Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy.'' London: Routledge. ISBN 0415073103
  
Kant in the 2nd edition (1787) of his Critique of Pure Reason wrote a section called Refutation of Idealism to distinguish his transcendental idealism versus Berkeley's Dogmatic Idealism. In addition to this refutation in both the 1780 & 1787 editions the section "Paralogisms of Pure Reason" is an implict critque of Descartes Problematic Idealism viz. the Cogito. He says that just from "the spontaneity of thought" (cf Descartes Cogito) it is not possible to infer the 'I' as an object; he never explicitly said words to the effect "Descartes was wrong like Russell or Nietszche after him."  Nietzsche makes this precise point 100 years later in his Book ''Beyond Good and Evil.''
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==External links==
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All links retrieved February 24, 2018.
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*[http://www.iep.utm.edu/g/germidea.htm German Idealism], The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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*[http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07634a.htm Idealism], Catholic Encyclopedia.
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*G. E. Moore. [http://www.ditext.com/moore/refute.html The Refutation of Idealism], ''Mind'' 12 (1903), Transcribed into Hypertext by Andrew Chrucky, March 5, 1997.
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*[https://sites.google.com/a/lclark.edu/idealism/sgi The Society for German Idealism].  
  
====Søren Kierkegaard====
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===General philosophy sources===
 
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*[http://plato.stanford.edu/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy].  
Kierkegaard attacked Hegel's idealist philosophy in several of his works, but most succinctly in ''[[Concluding Unscientific Postscript]]'' (1846).  In the ''Postscript'', Kierkegaard, as the pseudonymous philosopher Johannes Climacus, argues that a logical system is possible but an existential system is impossible.  Hegel argues that once one has reached an ultimate understanding of the logical structure of the world, one has also reached an understanding of the logical structure of [[God]]'s mind.  Climacus claims Hegel's [[absolute idealism]] mistakenly blurs the distinction between existence and thought.  Climacus also argues that our mortal nature places limits on our understanding of reality.  As Climacus argues: ''"So-called systems have often been characterized and challenged in the assertion that they abrogate the distinction between good and evil, and destroy freedom. Perhaps one would express oneself quite as definitely, if one said that every such system fantastically dissipates the concept existence. ... Being an individual man is a thing that has been abolished, and every speculative philosopher confuses himself with humanity at large; whereby he becomes something infinitely great, and at the same time nothing at all."''
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*[http://www.iep.utm.edu/ The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy].  
 
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*[http://www.bu.edu/wcp/PaidArch.html Paideia Project Online].  
====Friedrich Nietzsche====
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*[http://www.gutenberg.org/ Project Gutenberg].
 
 
<!--Can someone properly explain what Nietzsche is criticising about idealism rather than just quoting — Dood if you understood this paragraph you would not ask this question "tautological premises and/or beggin the question—finish reading this paragraph and it will explain everything"—>Friedrich Nietzsche was the first to mount a logically serious criticism of Idealism that has been popularised by [[David Stove]] (see below).  He pre-empts Stove's GEM by arguing that Kant's argument for his trancendental idealism rests on a tautology and/or begging the question. therefore is an invalid, improper argument.  
 
 
 
In his book ''Beyond Good and Evil'', Part 1 On the Prejudice of Philosophers Section 11, he ridicules [[Kant]] for admiring himself because he had undertaken and (thought he) succeeded in tackling "the most difficult thing that could ever be undertaken on behalf of metaphysics." 
 
 
 
Quoting [[Nietzsche]]'s prose:
 
 
 
:"But let us reflect; it is high time to do so. 'How are synthetic judgements a priori possible?' Kant asked himself-and what really is his answer? 'By virtue of a faculty' - but unfortunately not in five words,...The honeymoon of German philosophy arrived.  All the young theologians of the Tübingen seminary went into the bushes all looking for 'faculties.'...'By virtue of a faculty' - he had said, or at least meant. But is that an answer? An explanation? Or is it not rather merely a repetition of the question? How does opium induce sleep? 'By virtue of a faculty,' namely the virtus dormitiva, replies the doctor in Moliére."
 
 
 
In addition to the Idealism of [[Kant]], [[Nietzsche]] in the same book attacks the idealism of [[Schopenhauer]] and [[Descartes]] via a similar argument to Kant's orginal critique of [[Descartes]].  Quoting [[Nietzsche]]:
 
 
 
:There are still harmless self-observers who believe that there are "immediate certainties"; for example, "I think," or as the superstition of Schopenhauer put it, "I will"; as though knowledge here got hold of its objects purely and nakedly as "the thing in itself," without any falsification on the part of either the subject or the object.  But that "immediate certainty," as well as "absolute knowledge" and the "thing in itself," involved a ''contradictio in adjecto'', (contradiction between the noun and the adjective) I shall repeat a hundred times; we really ought to free ourselves from the seduction of words!
 
 
 
====G. E. Moore====
 
 
 
The first criticism of Idealism that falls within the analytic philosophical framework is by one of its co-founders [[G. E. Moore|Moore]].  This 1903 seminal article, ''The Refutation of Idealism''. This one of the first demonstrations of Moore's commitment to analysis as the proper philosophical method.
 
 
 
Moore proceeds by examining the Berkeleian aphorism ''esse est percipi'': "to be is to be perceived". He examines in detail each of the three terms in the aphorism, finding that it must mean that the object and the subject are ''necessarily'' connected. So, he argues, for the idealist, "yellow" and "the sensation of yellow" are necessarily identical - to be yellow is necessarily to be experienced as yellow. But, in a move similar to the [[open question argument]], it also seems clear that there is a difference between "yellow" and "the sensation of yellow". For Moore, the idealist is in error because "that ''esse'' is held to be ''percipi'', solely because what is experienced is held to be identical with the experience of it".<!-- This could be improved by someone with a better background in Moore - please help! —>
 
 
 
Though this refutation of idealism was the first strong statement by analytic philosophy against its idealist predecessors this argument did not show that the GEM (in post Stove vernacular, see below) is logically invalid.  Arguments advanced by Nietzsche (prior to Moore), Rusell (just after Moore) & 80 years later Stove put a nail in the coffin for the "master" argument supporting idealism.
 
 
 
====Bertrand Russell====
 
 
 
Despite his hugely popular book  ''The Problems of Philosophy'' (this book was in its 17th printing by 1943)which was written for a general audience rather than academia; few ever mention Russell's critique even though he completely anticipates [[David Stove]]'s GEM both in form and content (see below for David Stove's GEM).  In chapter 4 (Idealism) highlights Berkeley's tautological premise for advancing idealism.
 
 
 
Quoting Russell's prose (1912:42-43):
 
 
 
:"If we say that the things known must be in the mind, we are either un-duly limiting the mind's power of knowing, or we are uttering a mere tautology. We are uttering a mere tautology if we mean by 'in the mind' the same as by 'before the mind', i.e. if we mean merely being apprehended by the mind.  But if we mean this, we shall have to admit that what, in this sense, is in the mind, may nevertheless be not mental. Thus when we realize the nature of knowledge, Berkeley's argument is seen to be wrong in substance as well as in form, and his grounds for supposing that 'idea'-i.e. the objects apprehended-must be mental, are found to have no validity whatever.  Hence his grounds in favour of the idealism may be dismissed."
 
 
 
====A.C. Ewing====
 
 
 
Published in 1933 A.C. Ewing according to David Stove mounted the first full length book critique of Idealism, entitled  ''Idealism; a critical survey''.  Stove does not mention that Ewing anticipated his GEM. 
 
 
 
====David Stove====
 
 
 
The [[Australia]]n philosopher [[David Stove]] argued in typically acerbic style that idealism rested on what he called "the worst argument in the world".  His critique of Idealism is perhaps the most devastating critique of subjective idealism in philosophy.  From a logical point of view his critique is no different from Russell or Nietzsche's - but Stove has been more widely cited and most clearly highlighted the mistake of idealist proponents.  He named the form of this argument - invented by Berkeley - "the GEM". Berkeley claimed that "(the mind) is deluded to think it can and does conceive of bodies existing unthought of, or without the mind, though at the same time they are apprehended by, or exist in, itself".  Stove argued that this claim proceeds from the tautology that nothing can be thought of without its being thought of, to the conclusion that nothing can exist without its being thought of.
 
 
 
The following is Stove's homely version of Berkeley's GEM (1991:139):
 
 
 
1) You cannot have trees-without-the-mind in mind, without having them in mind.  
 
 
 
2) Therefore, you cannot have trees-without-the-mind in mind.
 
 
 
1) Is a tautology (self-referential statement); therefore the premise of this argument is trivially true.
 
 
 
2) Is not a trivially true conclusion.  The logic flowing from 1) to 2) is invalid as tautological premises can bring only tautological conclusions
 
 
 
Refer to Stove's 1991 book ''The Plato Cult & Other Philosophical Follies'' chapter 6 ''Idealism: A Victorian Horror Story'' for numerous elicidations and numerous GEM's quoted from the history of philosophy and GEM's reconstructed in syllogistic form.
 
 
 
For readers familiar with Nietzsche, Russell and Stove's criticism of Idealism it is clear that Stove's GEM merely repackages Rusell's precise points and borrowing Nietzsche's polemics against idealism.
 
 
 
====John Searle====
 
In ''[[The Construction of Social Reality]]'' [[John Searle]] offers an attack on some versions of idealism. Searle conveniently summarises two important arguments for idealism. The first is based on our perception of reality:
 
 
 
:''1. All we have access to in perception are the contents of our own experiences''
 
 
 
:''2. The only epistemic basis we can have for claims about the external world are our perceptual experiences''
 
 
 
therefore,
 
 
 
:''3. the only reality we can meaningfully speak of is the reality of perceptual experiences (''The Construction of Social Reality'' p. 172)''
 
 
 
Whilst agreeing with (2), Searle argues that (1) is false, and points out that (3) does not follow from (1) and (2).
 
 
 
The second argument for idealism runs as follows:
 
 
 
:''Premise: Any cognitive state occurs as part of a set of cognitive states and within a cognitive system''
 
 
 
:''Conclusion 1: It is impossible to get outside of all cognitive states and systems to survey the relationships between them and the reality they are used to cognize''
 
 
 
:''Conclusion 2: No cognition is ever of  a reality that exists independently of cognition (''The Construction of Social Reality'' p. 174)''
 
 
 
Searle goes on to point out that conclusion 2 simply does not follow from its precedents.
 
 
 
====Alan Musgrave====
 
[[Alan Musgrave]] in an article titled ''Realism and Antirealism'' in R. Klee (ed), ''Scientific Inquiry: Readings in the Philosophy of Science'', Oxford, 1998, 344-352 - later re-titled to ''Conceptual Idealism and Stove's GEM'' in A. Musgrave, Essays on Realism and Rationalism, Rodopi, 1999 also in M.L. Dalla Chiara et. al. (eds), ''Language, Quantum, Music'', Kluwer, 1999, 25-35 - [[Alan Musgrave]] argues in addition to Stove's GEM, Conceptual Idealists compound their mistakes with use/mention confusions and proliferation of unnecessary hyphenated entities.  
 
 
 
stock examples of use/mention confusions:
 
 
 
:Santa Claus (the person) does not exist.
 
:'Santa Claus' (the name/concept/fairy tale) does exist; because adults tell children this every christmas season.
 
 
 
The distinction in philosophical circles is highlighted by putting quotations around the word when we want to refer only to the name and not the object. 
 
 
 
stock examples of hyphenated entities:
 
 
 
:things-in-itself ([[Immanuel Kant]])
 
:things-as-interacted-by-us ([[Arthur Fine]])
 
:Table-of-commonsense (Sir [[Arthur Eddington]])
 
:Table-of-physics (sir [[Arthur Eddington]])
 
:Moon-in-itself
 
:Moon-as-howelled-by-wolves
 
:Moon-as-conveived-by-Aristotelians
 
:Moon-as-conveived-by-Galileans
 
 
 
Hyphenated entities are "warning signs" for conceptual idealism according to Musgrave is because they over emphasis the epistemic (ways on how people come to learn about the world) activities and will more likely commit errors in use/mention.  These entities do not exist (strictly speaking and are [[ersatz]] entities) but highlight the numerous ways in which people come to know the world.
 
 
 
In Sir Arthur Eddington's case use/mention confusions compounded his problem when he thought he was sitting at two different tables in his study (table-of-commonsense and table-of-physics). In fact Eddington was sitting at one table but had two different perspectives or ways of knowing about that one table.
 
 
 
[[Richard Rorty]] and [[Postmodernist]] Philosohpy in general have been attacked by Musgrave for commiting use/mention confusions.  Musgrave argues that these confusions help proliferate GEM's in our thinking and serious thought should avoid GEM's.
 
 
 
===Idealism in religious thought===
 
Not all [[religion]] and belief in the [[supernatural]] is, strictly speaking, anti-materialist in nature. While many types of religious belief are indeed specifically idealist, for example, [[Hinduism|Hindu]] beliefs about the nature of the [[Brahman]], [[Zen]] Buddhism stands in the middle way of [[dialectics]] between idealism and materialism, and mainstream [[Christianity|Christian]] doctrine affirms the importance of the materiality of [[Christ]]'s human body and the necessity of self-restraint when dealing with the material world. 
 
 
 
The [[theology]] of [[Christian Science]] is explicitly idealist: it teaches that all that exists is God and God's ideas; that the world as it appears to the senses is a distortion of the underlying spiritual reality.
 
 
 
Several modern religious movements and texts, for example the organizations within the [[New Thought Movement]], the [[Unity Church]] and the book, ''[[A Course in Miracles]]'', may be said to have a particularly idealist orientation.  In ''[[A Course in Miracles]]'' the body and the senses are said to do nothing. All of our perceptions including the body and the sense organs are projected thought within the mind which only appear to function. One analogy is the movie screen. There is an appearance of characters sensing and reacting to one another when this is simply a projection.
 
 
 
The West is inundated with physicalistic monism. There is widespread belief that everything will be explained in terms of matter/energy by science. Since we are constantly taught this it may make the idea of mentalistic monism hard to grasp. One way to begin to grasp the idea is through analogy. The movie screen analogy was given above. If we next consider "Star Trek's holodeck" it takes us a step further as what appear to be physical objects are not. Next consider the movie "The Matrix". In "The Matrix" even people's bodies and identities are projected. Then replace the machine with a vast and powerful mind. A last analogy is our dreams at night. We seem to be in a world filled with other objects and other people and yet there is nothing physical. Projection makes perception. Although this is not a strict philosophical argument it does allow us to begin to think along these lines.
 
 
 
More accurately, Idealism is based on the root word "Ideal," meaning a perfect form of, and is most accurately described as a belief in perfect forms of virtue, truth, and the absolute. Idea-ism may be a more appropriate term for the definitions listed above. There is a clear distinction between an idea and an ideal (i.e. Websters Dictionary says "conforming exactly to an ideal, law, or standard: perfect.").
 
idealism in comparison to pragmatism
 
 
 
==Other uses==
 
In general parlance, "idealism" or "idealist" is also used to describe a person having high [[ideal (ethics)|ideals]], sometimes with the connotation that those ideals are unrealisable or at odds with "practical" life.
 
 
 
The word "ideal" is commonly used as an adjective to designate qualities of perfection, desirability, and excellence. This is foreign to the epistemological use of the word "idealism" which pertains to internal [[mental]] [[representations]]. These internal ideas represent objects that are assumed to exist outside of the mind.
 
 
 
==See also==
 
*[[A Course In Miracles]]
 
*[[J. M. E. McTaggart|McTaggart, John]] ''The Unreality of Time'', available at [[wikisource:The Unreality of Time]]
 
*[[Solipsism]], which is related to epistemological idealism
 
*[[Practical idealism]]
 
*[[Transcendental idealism]]
 
*[http://www.spirituality.com/dt/toc_sh.jhtml Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy]: idealism in religious thought
 
 
 
==Reference==
 
Francis Johnson, Philosophy Professor
 
(University of Texas)
 
 
 
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Latest revision as of 22:33, 24 February 2018

This article is about the philosophical notion of Idealism. Idealism is also a term in international relations theory and in Christian eschatology.

Idealism is a term used to describe a wide variety of philosophical positions. One can distinguish two general senses: A Platonic sense, and a modern sense. Idealism in the Platonic sense involves the claim that ideal things occupy a metaphysically privileged position in the universe. Idealism in the modern sense centers around the claim that at least large portions of reality (in particular, the experienced physical world) are metaphysically based in something mental (minds and their ideas or representations). Such a view stands in stark opposition with "materialist" views of reality, which claim that mental entities and properties are somehow based or grounded in non-mental, material entities and properties, of the sort with which physics is concerned (there are positions between the two extremes, such as dualism).

Though both types of idealism are first and foremost metaphysical positions, their proponents have typically tried to motivate them using epistemological considerations. Plato's concern with the ideal realm appears to have been largely motivated by questions concerning knowledge. Epistemological arguments play a central role in the defenses of modern idealism presented by the two most prominent idealists in modern Western philosophy: George Berkeley and Immanuel Kant. Though there are relations between the two types of idealism, this article will discuss them separately.

Platonic idealism

In Book VII of the Republic, Plato presented his famous "Allegory of the Cave," which stands as one of the most vivid images of Platonic idealism. Taken together with Book VI's sun metaphor, the picture that emerges is roughly as follows: Certain entities ("Forms") stand at the basis of reality. These things are ideal, not in a pictoral sense, but rather in the sense that they represent a sort of perfection. For example, the Form of the Good is the only entity that is entirely good. Other entities have some degree of goodness only by "participating" in the Form. Sensible objects have the properties they do participating imperfectly in a large number of Forms. This "participation" makes them somehow less real than the Forms, so that Plato describes them as mere shadows or reflections. Throughout the relevant discussion, Plato is clear that the metaphysical relation between sensible objects and Forms perfectly parallels (and, it is safe to assume, was inspired by) the epistemic relations between perceptual awareness of sensory particulars and intellectual awareness of abstract universals.

In the Republic, the relation of the Forms to the rest of reality received little more than a metaphorical explanation. The Forms were somehow (perhaps causally) responsible for the sensible world, but Plato gave no suggestion that illumination was possible on that front. In his (probably later) dialogue Timaeus, however, Plato presented a creation story that suggested a picture more in line with most religious orthodoxy (both as Plato knew it, and as what it would become). In the Timaeus, the world is created when a powerful demiurge (meaning "craftsman") shapes the physical world in the images of the Forms, which act as blueprints.

The Timaeus was one of the most influential of Plato's works for the Christian Platonists. Heavily influenced by that account, Augustine rejected the idea that God merely shaped the world at some point in time, and rather held that God timelessly created the world. Such a timeless creation was in many ways closer to the picture originally presented in the Republic. Augustine also rejected the picture of the Forms as independent of and prior to God, instead locating such eternal archetypes in God alone.

Versions of such a view lasted even into the modern era. The great German philosopher Leibniz held that God's understanding contained ideas of all possible things, and that his act of creation was simply him actualizing the combination of things that he knew to be best.

Modern idealism

Overview of modern idealism

In the first section of his 1783 work, Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics, Kant defined "genuine" idealism as consisting in the assertion that, "there are none but thinking beings; all other things which we believe are perceived in intuitions are nothing but representations in the thinking beings, to which no object external to them corresponds" (4:288-89 in the Akademie edition). The view described here applies as well to Leibniz as to Berkeley. It involves a sweeping claim about the nature of reality—namely, that the very notion of something entirely non-mental existing is either incoherent (Berkeley) or else cannot survive philosophical reflection (Leibniz).

Kant offered this definition, however, in order to distance himself from such positions (when writing the Prolegomena, he was reeling from reviews of his 1781 Critique of Pure Reason which charged him with merely restating Berkeley's position). His view, which he described as "transcendental" or "critical" idealism (4:293-94), did not involve the claim that all non-mental things must exist in representations.

The distinction Kant aimed to draw can be turned into a useful general point. It is clearest to understand the term "idealism" in a relative sense and an absolute sense. In the relative sense, a philosopher is an idealist about a certain sort of entity or property, where this simply means that she believes that the existence and nature of that entity or property ultimately reduces to facts about minds and their representations. Given this, certain forms of idealism should be generally accepted—for instance, we might be idealists about a certain fictional character. Kant, then, was an idealist about a certain set of properties (including space and time), but not about others (for instance, the property of being able to affect other entities).

The absolute sense of "idealism," then, is relative idealism about all entities and properties. This is then a much stronger position, and one that cannot be conclusively argued for one entity or property at a time.

George Berkeley

Inspired by the work of the French philosopher and theologian Nicolas Malebranche, the Irish Bishop George Berkeley believed that philosophical positions that posited absolutely non-mental entities in the universe (in particular, Cartesian material substance) were responsible for the spread of atheism and skepticism across Europe in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. According to a philosophical picture such as that advanced by John Locke, material substance was the crucial aspect of the physical world, and was responsible for causing representations in the mind. It could not, however, be directly perceived, and could only be known indirectly through the representations it caused.

But if material substance was at the core of physical reality and could not be directly known, then, Berkeley believed, it was inevitable that people would come to doubt whether it existed, and thereby come to question the reality of the world of everyday objects. Worse, in his view, this view described a universe that seemed capable of operating independently of God. Were people to become convinced of such a picture, it was inevitable that they would come to wonder if they had any reason for believing in God at all.

On the other hand, if people believed (1) that all that existed were minds and their representations, (2) that the world of everyday objects was simply composed of representations, and (3) that most of their representations were directly caused by God, then the source of those temptations towards skepticism and atheism would dry up.

In his two major works, the Principles of Human Knowledge (1710) and Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous (1713), Berkeley presented two general arguments for his idealism: The first based on the differing representations we have of supposedly unchanging objects, and the second based on the very conceivability of something non-mental.

The first general argument might be schematized as follows: Our perceptions of objects change with changes in us (e.g. objects appear different shapes from different perspective angles), but, on the view that there exists some non-mental material substance, the underlying substance needn't change with (e.g.) changes in our position. Yet there is no non-arbitrary way of determining which of those changing perceptions is correct, in the sense of revealing the true nature of the object. Because those perceptions are often incompatible, they cannot all reveal the nature of the object, but since they are all on par, the only reasonable conclusion is that none of them do. But that, Berkeley claimed, is obviously absurd; of course human perceptions say something about the nature of the object. That's why people use their perception in the first place. Given this, he thought that the only reasonable alternative was to identify the object with one's perceptions of it, thereby allowing one direct epistemic access to it (this relied on the uncontroversial assumption that people have direct access to their perceptions).

The first argument, however, is not nearly strong enough to establish absolute idealism, which was Berkeley's aim. It leaves open the possibility that the objects people perceive have an unknown reality, as well as the possibility that there might be unperceivable and non-mental objects. To rule out those possibilities, Berkeley presented another line of argument. Accepting a strong form of empiricism, Berkeley claimed that the only understanding of "existence" one can have must be one derived from his experiences. Human experiences, however, are all of one's own mind and one's own representations. But in that case, the only meaning that existence can have is "to have a representation or be a representation." Material substance, however, was supposed to be something that was neither a representation nor a possessor of representations. The conclusion is that "material substance exists" is in fact a contradiction.

Kant

Berkeley's second argument (presented above) relied heavily on the claim that all of one's meaningful thoughts must be based in direct experience. While this thought has appealed to some philosophers (perhaps most notably in the twentieth century, the logical positivists), it strikes most people as highly problematic. For instance, people seem to be able to think thoughts with universal and necessary content (for instance, all events have a cause), even though experience alone seems insufficient to yield ideas of universality or necessity.

Motivated by just such thoughts, Kant rejected the strong empiricist assumptions that underlay Berkeley's most radical arguments. Nevertheless, in his Critique of Pure Reason, he advanced arguments for forms of relative idealism about almost all qualities of objects, including their spatiality, temporality, and all sensible qualities.

With respect to space and time, Kant believed that some form of idealism was required to explain the vast store of a priori knowledge people have concerning the spatial and temporal properties of objects (the clearest example being geometry). How, Kant wondered, could people know, as they doubtless do, that all objects they could encounter have a spatial relation to each other and can be described mathematically? After all, people have experienced only a minute fraction of what exists, so they are hardly in a place to draw any inductive inference to such a conclusion. The only way one could explain this bulk of necessary, universal knowledge, Kant believed, was if space and time only existed as representations in the mind that one imposes on objects she encounters.

Nevertheless, Kant was clear that this does not mean that the objects people encounter only exist in their representations. The objects exist on their own—it is rather a certain set of their properties that are ideal. They almost certainly have other properties beyond those people encounter, and those properties needn't have any relation to anything mental. Kant often puts this distinction in terms of a contrast between "things as they appear to us" and "things as they are in themselves." By emphasizing ignorance of how things are in themselves, Kant hoped to rule out the possibility that natural science (which has to do only with things as they appear) could disprove the existence of freedom of the will or the existence of God.

German idealism

Kant's idealism was enormously influential. Many of his successors, however, believed that his insistence on the existence of things in themselves showed that he had not taken his own insight concerning knowledge seriously enough. If knowledge only concerns representations, they thought, how could one even know the possibility of something outside of those representations? How could that even make sense? In response to these worries, absolute idealism surfaced again in Germany in the work of such thinkers as Fichte and Hegel. This issued in the era known as "German Idealism."

Fichte and Hegel's views are present in some of the most difficult pieces of philosophy ever produced (e.g. Fichte's Theory of Science or Wissenschaftslehre and Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit). Yet the core idea is relatively simple: Whereas Berkeley believed that some supremely powerful mind (God) was needed to explain the varied perceptions humans experience, and Kant explained experience in terms of interactions with things whose inner natures humans were unaware of, Fichte (in his later work) and Hegel believed that such explanations could come from features internal to the force that manifests itself in finite minds (some sort of general mental force).

The advantage of such a move was that there was no longer an appeal to anything as supernatural as God or things in themselves. The disadvantage is the resulting difficulty in explaining how features of one's own mind could possibly account for the wildly varying and deeply complex set of representations we experience.

Despite this daunting philosophical challenge, the philosophical picture proposed by the German Idealists was extremely influential. It enjoyed a surge of popularity in English speaking countries in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as present in such figures as F.H. Bradley, J.M.E. McTaggart, and Josiah Royce.

Criticisms of idealism

The most natural response to idealism is that it violates some tenet of common sense. Berkeley was well aware of this, and spent much of his Three Dialogues attempted to argue to the contrary.

Yet a sustained philosophical attack on idealism was made (largely in response to Hegelian idealism) by the British philosopher G. E. Moore in the early twentieth century (Bertrand Russell made a parallel attack). Moore directly attacked that essential assumption of idealism, that what people are directly aware of are their representations. Instead, Moore proposed that people should understand the objects of their thoughts to be propositions, where propositions can be understood as states of affairs constituted by genuinely non-mental objects in the world. Such a picture has become the dominant one in contemporary analytic philosophy, and idealism is not often counted as a viably philosophical position. Nevertheless, defenders of idealism may well note that Moore's alternative picture is no more self-evident than the picture it meant to replace, so that the matter is far from settled.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Augustine. 2007. Confessionum libri tredecim (Confessions). Trans. F.J. Sheed. Indianapolis: Hackett. ISBN 0872208168
  • Augustine. 2003. De civitate Dei (The City of God). Trans. Penguin Classics. Harmondsworth: Penguin. ISBN 0140448942
  • Baldwin, Thomas. 2003. "Moore, George Edward." In E. Craig, ed. Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. London: Routledge. ISBN 0415073103
  • Berkeley, George. 1988. Principles of Human Knowledge/Three Dialogues. Roger Woolhouse, ed. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 0192835491
  • Fichte, Johann Gottlieb. 1992. Foundations of the Transcendental Philosophy (Wissenschaftslehre) Nova Methodo (1796-1799). Daniel Breazeale, ed. and trans. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
  • Hegel, G.W.F. 1977. Phenomenology of Spirit. Trans, A.V. Miller. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198245300
  • Kant, Immanuel. 1977. Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics. Trans. James W. Ellington. Indianapolis: Hackett. ISBN 9780915144334
  • Kant, Immanuel. 1963. Critique of Pure Reason. Trans. N. K. Smith. London: MacMillan & Co.
  • Matthews, Gareth B. 1998. "Augustine." In E. Craig, ed. Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. London: Routledge. ISBN 0415073103
  • Moore, G.E. 1993. Selected Writings. T. Baldwin, ed. London: Routledge. ISBN 041509853X
  • Plato. 1997. Complete Works. John M. Cooper, ed. Indianapolis, Hackett. ISBN 0872203492
  • Sprigge, T.L.S. 1998. "Idealism." In E. Craig, ed. Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. London: Routledge. ISBN 0415073103

External links

All links retrieved February 24, 2018.

General philosophy sources

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