Hardcover with dust jacket. Pencil underlining and markings throughout. Dust jacket is slightly edge chipped and scuffed; covered with mylar. Boards are edge worn and worn.
Bennett's book is a standard reference for the three great historical empiricists, and any student of the movement will find it illuminating and worth reading.
It's primary failure is a rhetorical one. There are barely any opening or closing remarks; Bennett makes an insubstantial attempt to lay out the connection between these three thinkers or what overall lesson one is to learn from examining them. The reader is thrown (after a very few brief paragraphs) directly into a discussion of Locke's theory of meaning, and at the end a dissection of Hume's justification for enduring objects simply seems to stop. The book would have been much clearer had Bennett provided an opening and closing chapter to tie everything together.