Friday, 19 July 2019
Materialism vs Idealism :: essays papers
Materialism vs Idealism    History tells us very little of Titus Lucretius Carus, but one can see  from reading his work that he has a strong dislike towards religious superstition,  which he claims is the root of human fear and in turn the cause of impious  acts. Although he does not deny the existence of a god, his work is aimed  at proving that the world is not guided or controlled by a divinity. Lucretius  asserts that matter exists in the form of atoms, which move around the  universe in an empty space. This empty space, or vacuity, allows for the  movement of the atoms and without it everything would be one mass. He explains  that matter and vacuity can not occupy the same space, "...where there  is empty space, there matter is not...", and these two things make  up the entire universe. These invisible particles come together to form  material objects, you and I are made of the same atoms as a chair or a  tree. When the tree dies or the chair is thrown into a fire the atoms do  not burn up or die, but are dispersed back into the vacuity. The atoms  alone are without mind or secondary qualities, but they can combine to  form living and thinking objects, along with sound, color, taste, etc...  Atoms form life, consciousness, and the soul, and when our body dies there  is nothing left of the latter except for its parts, which randomly become  parts of other forms. Matter is never ending reality, only changing in  its form. In the philosophical system developed by Irish philosopher George  Berkeley, Idealism, Berkeley states that physical objects, matter, do not  exist independent of the mind. The pencil that I am writing this essay  with would not exist if I were not perceiving it with my senses, but in  the dialogue between Hylus and Philonous Berkeley attempts to show things  can and do exist apart from the human mind and our perception, but only  because there is a mind in which all ideas are perceived or a deity that  creates perception in the human mind, either way its God. He says that  the external world can not be understood by thought, but "sensible  things", objects that we perceive, can be reduced to ideas in the  mind. These ideas, or "objects before the mind", possess primary  qualities, the main structure, and secondary qualities, what we derive  from our senses, which are inseparable. I'm confused about this, if I'm  thinking about a star in a different galaxy, which makes the star an "object"  before my mind, then where are the secondary qualities?  					    
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