Was Berkeley a Rational Empiricist? In this short essay I will argue for the conclusion that, although Berkeley ought to be

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1 In this short essay I will argue for the conclusion that, although Berkeley ought to be recognized as a thoroughgoing empiricist, he demonstrates an exceptional and implicit familiarity with the thought of Rationalists, particularly Leibniz himself. Although it is trivially easy to demonstrate that Berkeley read Leibniz, it is more difficult to show the influence of Leibniz on the thought of Berkeley except where Berkeley is explicit in his opposition to Leibniz. The evidences I will offer for thinking that Berkeley s thought was influenced by Leibniz are principally indirect and exegetical. To prove this thesis would be a difficult task indeed, and certainly beyond the scope of this essay; my task will be accomplished to my satisfaction if I manage to justify entertaining the speculation that Berkeley inherited Leibnizian presumptions with a reserved optimism. There have certainly been attempts to paint Berkeley as a rationalist, as not a few empiricists would be more than happy to hand him over to the Cartesians. 1 However, the matter of whether Berkeley was an empiricist can only be settled once a clear definition of empiricism can act as the background against which his philosophical system is measured. Empiricism describes, as does its early modern rival, rationalism, an epistemological commitment, and not a metaphysical one. If rationalism is the commitment to the methodological use of deduction and rational intuition being the most reliable avenue to incorrigible knowledge (episteme), as I have elsewhere argued, 2 then empiricism presents itself as the alternative commitment. Empiricists are characteristically sceptical of deductive reasoning based on rational reflection, and instead propose that induction is the infallible or preferable starting point for gaining knowledge. Thus, empiricists locate the principle epistemological guide in the senses rather than in the rational faculty. Empiricism might be positively construed, therefore, as the commitment to Aristotle s 1 Michael Ayers, Was Berkeley an Empiricist or a Rationalist, In the Cambridge Companion to Berkeley, p.34 2 In the final exam last semester for the Rationalism class I laid out my argument.

2 maxim that: there is nothing in the intellect which was not first in the senses. 3 Thus, empiricists believe that the most basic building blocks of knowledge are experiences. With this definition in place, it becomes unambiguously clear that Berkeley qualifies as an empiricist. Indeed, Berkeley begins by expanding the Aristotelian maxim to: there is nothing in the world which is not in the senses. All things exist, with the possible exception of God who exists a se, only insofar as they are perceived. Yes, Berkeley did read Leibniz; it is trivially easy to demonstrate that Berkeley was familiar with Leibniz, as Berkeley makes himself the opponent of positions for which Leibniz acted as the chief protagonist in the early modern period, such as on dynamics. 4 Often Berkeley singles Leibniz out, and specifically cites Leibniz 5 when Berkeley attacks scholastic ideas. Some of the features of Berkeley s idealism, however, suggest a subtle rapprochement to Leibniz thought. The first and most obvious line of evidence for this comes from Berkeley s criticism of the famous corpuscularian primary-secondary quality distinction. Berkeley suggests that the same arguments brought against secondary qualities will hold proof against 6 primary qualities as well. Beginning with extension and size, he argues that there is [clearly] no extension or figure in an object because to one eye it shall seem little, smooth, and round, when at the same time it appears to the other, great, uneven, and angular? 7 This argument is intended as a parody of arguments against qualities such as colour existing in objects themselves rather than being merely perceived. However, his argument takes an interesting turn. Berkeley, speaking through his chief protagonist Philonous, proposes that size is relative, inviting Hylas, his fictional 3 Turner, W. (1907). Aristotle. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved April 14, 2012 from New Advent: 4 Lisa Downing, Berkeley s Philosophy of Science In The Cambridge Companion to Berkeley Lisa Downing, Berkeley s Philosophy of Science In The Cambridge Companion to Berkeley Berkeley, first dialogue, In Modern Philosophy: An Anthology of Primary Sources second Edition, Ed. Roger Ariew and Eric Watkins. p Berkeley, first dialogue, In Modern Philosophy p.465

3 interlocutor, to consider whether a mite and a man perceiving the same bodies, would find them to be the same size. Curiously, this argument is hung on a presupposition which was not shared by empiricists before Leibniz: that material atoms cannot exist. If a material atom exists, then one could argue for the objective size of any composite object; the fact that Berkeley doesn t bother entertaining the objection by throwing it onto the lips of Hylas in the dialogues cannot be plausibly accounted for by appeal to Berkeley s ignorance of corpuscularian doctrine. Instead, Berkeley s silence on this point is best explained by his implicit awareness that the point must be entirely conceded that material atoms cannot exist. Here, it has been suggested that Berkeley was influenced by Bayle, Locke or Descartes, 8 but I suggest that a more reasonable candidate is Leibniz. Leibniz argument against material atoms is accompanied by an argument that all extended bodies are infinitely divisible: In fact, the tiniest corpuscle is actually subdivided to infinity 9 for what reason can anyone give that nature should be limited in how finely it is subdivided? 10 These are both convictions which Berkeley seems to share, as he says that each [particle] of matter if extended must be infinitely extended or have an infinite series of extension. 11 Thus, while Berkeley s idealism may have precluded the possibility of any primary-secondary quality distinction, his formal arguments against the distinction betray, I think, an awareness of, if not implicit acceptance of, Leibniz criticisms. A second line of evidence for Berkeley s implicit Leibnizianism may come from Berkeley s recognition that the existence of God was a requirement for the coherence of his system. Berkeley says in one place: 8 Robert McKim, Berkeley s notebooks In The Cambridge Companion to Berkeley p.76 9 Leibniz, Leibniz 10 Leibniz, Leibniz 11 Robert McKim, Berkeley s notebooks In The Cambridge Companion to Berkeley p.76

4 Men commonly believe that all things are known or perceived by God because they believe in the existence of a God, whereas for me the order of reasons is reversed; I immediately and necessarily conclude the existence of a God because all sensible things must be perceived by him. 12 Although Berkeley s apologetic arguments for the existence of God give the impression that Berkeley believes in God either for inductive or else pragmatic reasons, 13 nevertheless Berkeley s conviction that God exists is neither, for him, the conclusion of inductive reasoning, nor is it presupposed as an article of faith. Rather, Berkeley recognizes that without God his philosophical system does not satisfy the principle of sufficient reason, since it would admit of brute facts. 14 He admits his concern when he says that ideas must have a cause something they depend on, something that produces and changes them. 15 Although the Leibnizian phrase principle of sufficient reason 16 is conspicuously absent from Berkeley s treatment, the same fundamental conviction is shared by Leibniz and Berkeley on this point. Moreover, it is clear that Berkeley rejected any argument from rational intuition for the existence of God, such as Malebranche s exemplarism, which Berkeley describes as a doctrine that I confess to finding incomprehensible. 17 In recapitulation, Berkeley was clearly familiar with Leibniz work, and often pulled no punches about his disagreement with him when Leibniz proposed doctrines which had the appearance of scholastic contamination. However, Berkeley also tacitly accepts much of what Leibniz argues for, including the impossibility of a material atom, or the need to satisfy the principle of sufficient reason. Of course, one might argue that Berkeley had come to the 12 Philip D. Cummins, Berkeley on Minds and Agency In The Cambridge Companion to Berkeley p See his The Minute Philosopher: A defence of the Christian Religion against so-called Free-Thinkers. 14 That is, facts without any explanations. 15 Principles, Leibniz, Exchange of Papers Between Leibniz and Clarke, 17 Principles, 148

5 conclusion of God s existence without even formally recognizing the principle of sufficient reason, just as one could argue that Berkeley rejected the possibility of material atoms simply by rejecting the possibility of matter. However, against these speculations I have provided arguments and comments which, I think, reflect an implicit Leibnizianism in Berkeley s thinking.

6 Bibliography Ariew, Roger and Eric Watkins, Modern Philosophy: An Anthology of Primary Sources, Second edition, Hackett publishing Company (Indianapolis: Cambridge, 2009). Early Modern Texts, accessed on April 13 th 2012: Downing, Lisa, George Berkeley, In The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2011 Edition) accessed on April 13 th 2012: McKim, Robert. Berkeley s Notebooks In The Cambridge Companion to Berkeley Ed. Kennith P. Winkler (New York: Cambridge University Press) 2005 pp Cummins, Philip D. Berkeley on Minds and Agency In The Cambridge Companion to Berkeley Ed. Kennith P. Winkler (New York: Cambridge University Press) 2005 pp

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