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註釋“It was in the name of common sense that Berkeley, the early eighteenth-century philosopher, repudiated Locke’s concept of substance: but his own principle (that ‘to be’ is either ‘to be perceived’ or ‘to perceive’) was quickly characterized as the very antithesis of common sense and as a vain, or even insane, attempt to dissolve the solid world into a dream. Both the interest and the difficulty of his philosophy consist largely in the problem of understanding how such totally opposed interpretations were possible, and how neither was wholly right or wholly wrong.”- Publisher