
Published online:
02 May 2011
Published in print:
27 January 2011
Online ISBN:
9780191724855
Print ISBN:
9780199556137
Contents
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I: Modern Qualities: the Philosophical Core I: Modern Qualities: the Philosophical Core
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II: Cosmological Context II: Cosmological Context
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III: Ontology III: Ontology
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IV: Epistemology IV: Epistemology
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(a) The direct road to the distinction (a) The direct road to the distinction
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(b) The direct road: empiricist strategies, and empiricist critics (b) The direct road: empiricist strategies, and empiricist critics
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(c) The indirect road: sense‐perception and mechanism (c) The indirect road: sense‐perception and mechanism
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(d) The false imputation of the sense (d) The false imputation of the sense
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References References
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Chapter
8 Qualities and Sensory Perception
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Philippe Hamou
Philippe Hamou
Philosophy, University of Paris, Ouest‐Nanterre
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Paris Nanterre University
Pages
160–181
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Published:02 May 2011
Cite
Hamou, Philippe, 'Qualities and Sensory Perception', in Desmond M. Clarke, and Catherine Wilson (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy in Early Modern Europe (2011; online edn, Oxford Academic, 2 May 2011), https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199556137.003.0009, accessed 5 May 2025.
Abstract
This article describes the conception of sensory perception during the early modern period. It discusses David Hume's Treatise of Human Nature where he contrasted the ancient metaphysics of substantial forms and occult qualities with the metaphysics of the Moderns. The article argues that Hume was fundamentally correct and that the doctrine of secondary qualities is indeed a distinctively modern doctrine that captures something of the very essence of the new philosophical age.
Keywords:
sensory perception, early modern period, David Hume, Treatise of Human Nature, metaphysics, secondary qualities
Series
Oxford Handbooks
Collection:
Oxford Handbooks Online
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