Excerpt from Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous
The bulk of the introductory matter requisite to an understanding of Berkeley"s Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous has already been given in the Preface to his Principles of Human Knowledge (No. 48 of the Religion of Science Library), which is supposed to be in the hands of the reader, and to which he is referred. It remains for us in this place simply to supply a few general characterisations and to refer again to Berkeley"s relations to Hume and to modern psychology. We also take advantage of this opportunity to reproduce two illustrations of Berkeley"s Rhode Island home, which will impart a human interest to our little work, and bring it nearer to our American readers. It was in Rhode Island that Alciphron was composed, - dialogues "better fitted than any in our language to enable the English reader to realise the charm of Cicero and Plato... In Rhode island.
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