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Locke, Berkeley, Hume: Central Themes by Jonathan Bennett

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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.

Paperback

First published January 1, 1971

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Profile Image for Michael Norwitz.
Author 16 books12 followers
September 21, 2025
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.
Profile Image for Amy Do.
131 reviews
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November 27, 2020
I don't think I understood much of this book so I don't feel qualified to rate it.
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