First, that's not the common meaning of the word, "same." I'm drinking out of a plastic Pepsi bottle right now that is, by my senses at least, indistinguishable from all the other bottles like it, but still not the same as those bottles. I'm not drinking from every bottle in the world when I drink from this one. Berkeley seems to think that "the vulgar" have no concept of two things having all the same perceptible qualities while being two different things (I guess he never met any twins), but I have no idea where he gets that. He seems to be using "the vulgar" as some kind of weird authority he can appeal to in order to reject a concept of identity that he doesn't like, and it's an authority that we conveniently can't ask to speak for itself. It's OLP tom-foolery before OLP even existed. — Pneumenon
Identical twins aren't qualitatively identical though. Nor are separate Pepsi bottles. They're distinguished in quality by their location, for one. — The Great Whatever
Berkeley's assertion - that your idea of the Pepsi bottle is identical to mine - incoherent, because we only perceive our own ideas of the bottle, not one another's. — Pneumenon
I think Berkeley's philosophy suffers from a false loyalty to common sense. — The Great Whatever
Strictly speaking, Hylas, we don’t see the same object that we feel...
But if every variation were thought sufficient to constitute a new kind or new individual, language would be made useless by the sheer number of names or by confusions amongst them.
The meanings of words are assigned by us; and since men customarily apply the word ‘same’ where no distinction or variety is perceived, and I don’t claim to alter their perceptions, it follows that as men have sometimes said ‘Several people saw the same thing’, they may continue to talk like that in similar situations, without deviating either from correctness of language or the truth of things. — Berkeley
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