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91亚色 philosophy professor named Berkeley Scholar in Residence

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Patrick J.J. Phillips

Patrick J.J. Phillips

Professor Patrick J. J. Phillips, from 91亚色鈥檚 Department of Philosophy, has been selected to be a 2018 Berkeley Scholar in Residence at the in Rhode Island, USA.

George Berkeley (1685 鈥 1753) was an Irish theologian, writer, philosopher, pamphleteer and bishop. Since 1975, the has invited IBS scholars from around the globe to stay in Berkeley鈥檚 house, Whitehall and promote the study of Berkeley鈥檚 philosophy.

鈥淚t is a pleasure to be the recipient of this honor by the International Berkeley Society,鈥 says Phillips, who will reside at Whitehall for August 2018. 鈥淚 look forward to representing 91亚色 at Whitehall as well as the opportunity to continue my investigations into Berkeley鈥檚 philosophy.鈥

Berkeley was also a nascent university president and administrator. With a promise of funds from the British Government to set up a university college in the Americas, he arrived at Rhode Island in 1729. It was here that he modified an existing structure into his home, which he then named Whitehall

Berkeley was one of the first university administrators to be promised government funds, only for the funds never to arrive. Without funding, his venture collapsed and he returned to the British Isles in 1731 to take up the position of Bishop of Cloyne in Ireland.

While at Whitehall waiting for funding, Berkeley penned his work, Alciphron (first published in 1732), which is not only a great work of Christian apologetics but is regarded as a classic of literature of the same stature as the Platonic dialogues.聽Alciphron also anticipates the emphasis on language and meaning of the philosophy of the 20th Century and shares points of contact with, among others, the works of Ludwig Wittgenstein (1899 -1951).

Perhaps most famous in Berkeley鈥檚 philosophy is his claim that 鈥淸t]o be is to be perceived,鈥 one of the strongest statements of idealist metaphysics: that what is real is our ideas and minds and that there is nothing 鈥渂eyond鈥 or 鈥渙utside鈥 our experience. Though often viewed as an eccentric philosophical position or, as his contemporary Samuel Johnson (1709 鈥 1784) opined dismissively as 鈥渁n ingenious sophistry,鈥 Berkeley鈥檚 denial of the metaphysical concept of matter enjoyed a resurgence with the development of modern physics.

Berkeley was also one of the first philosophers to draw a connection between epistemology (what we know or think we know) and our moral and ethical lives. 聽Berkeley prognosticated that with the rise of materialism, propounded by what Berkeley described as the 鈥渁bettors of impiety鈥 (the materialist philosophers), we would experience a spiritual and ethical dissolution 鈥 a prognostication that many within academia would argue has already come to pass.

鈥淚t is a pleasure to support the worthy goals of the International Berkeley Society in preserving Whitehall, not just for scholars, but for the general public,鈥 says Phillips.聽 鈥淭he eccentric character of this scholarship 鈥 to further the study of the Philosophy of Berkeley while living in his North American home and, at the same time, conduct tours of Whitehall for the general public in order to provide insight into the history of Berkeley鈥檚 home, his educational mission and his philosophy 鈥 is not only progressive, but is also a rare privilege.鈥

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