circulate. Except to cover nominal distribution costs, this file
cannot be sold without written permission from the copyright
holder. This copyright notice supersedes all previous notices on
earlier versions of this text file. When quoting from this text,
please use the following citation: <Berkeley's Three Dialogues>,
ed. James Fieser (Internet Release, 1996).
Editorial Conventions: Letters within angled brackets (e.g.,
) designate italics. Note references are contained within
square brackets (e.g., [1]). Original pagination is contained
within curly brackets (e.g., {1}). Spelling and punctuation have
not been modernized. Printer's errors have been corrected without
note. Bracketed comments within the end notes are the editor's.
This is a working draft. Please report errors to James Fieser
(jfieser@utm.edu).]
[2][Text within brackets is not contained in the first and second
editions.]
[3]["Size or figure, or sensible quality" -- "size, colour, &c,"
in the first and second
editions.]
[4]["In stones and minerals" -- in first and second editions.]
[5][The passage within brackets first appeared in the third
edition.]
[6][0mitted in last edition.]
[7]"Tell me, Hylas," -- "So Hylas" -- in first and second
editions.]
[8][This important passage, printed within brackets, is not found
in the first and second editions of the Didogues. It is, by
anticipation, Berkeley's answer to Hume's application of the
objections to the reality of abstract or unperceived Matter, to
the reality of the Ego or Self, of which we are aware through
memory, as identical amid the changes of its successive states.-
A. C. F.]
[9][The words within brackets are omitted in the third edition.]
[10][Omitted in authoes last edition.]
[11][In the first and second editions only.]
=47=
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