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World for Us: The Case for Phenomenalistic Idealism

World for Us: The Case for Phenomenalistic Idealism Hard cover - 2008

by John Foster

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Hard Cover. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; A World For Us aims to show that the physical world does not exist independently of the human mind, but draws its existence from the way in which, under God's ordinance, things appear to us in experience.
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Details

  • Title World for Us: The Case for Phenomenalistic Idealism
  • Author John Foster
  • Binding Hard Cover
  • Edition First Edition
  • Condition New
  • Pages 266
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Oxford University Press, USA, 2008. 266p. Hardback. ...it would be hard to find on the contemporary philosophic scene a better advocate of the idealistic stan
  • Date 2008-12-15
  • Features Bibliography, Dust Cover, Index, Table of Contents
  • Bookseller's Inventory # ria9780199297139_pod
  • ISBN 9780199297139 / 0199297134
  • Weight 1.25 lbs (0.57 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.2 x 6.1 x 0.9 in (23.37 x 15.49 x 2.29 cm)
  • Library of Congress subjects Phenomenology, Realism
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2008001087
  • Dewey Decimal Code 141

From the publisher

A World for Us aims to refute physical realism and establish in its place a form of idealism. Physical realism, in the sense in which John Foster understands it, takes the physical world to be something whose existence is both logically independent of the human mind and metaphysically fundamental. Foster identifies a number of problems for this realist view, but his main objection is that it does not accord the world the requisite empirical immanence. The form of idealism that he tries to establish in its place rejects the realist view in both its aspects. It takes the world to be something whose existence is ultimately constituted by facts about human sensory experience, or by some richer complex of non-physical facts in which such experiential facts centrally feature. Foster calls this phenomenalistic idealism. He tries to establish a specific version of such phenomenalistic idealism, in which the experiential facts that centrally feature in the constitutive creation of the world are ones that concern the organization of human sensory experience. The basic idea of this version is that, in the context of certain other constitutively relevant factors, this sensory organization creates the physical world by disposing things to appear systematically world-wise at the human empirical viewpoint. Chief among these other relevant factors is the role of God as the one who is responsible for the sensory organization and ordains the system of appearance it yields. It is this that gives the idealistically created world its objectivity and allows it to qualify as a real world.

About the author

John Foster was tutorial Fellow of Brasenose College 1966-2005 and an Emeritus Fellow from 2005-2009. His research interests have been in the fields of metaphysics, epistemology, mind, and language. He was the author of The Case for Idealism (1982), Ayer (1985), The Immaterial Self (1991), The Nature of Perception (2000), and The Divine Lawmaker (2004).