George Berkeley in America

Front Cover
Yale University Press, 1959 M12 11 - 240 pages
In 1728 George Berkeley, the Irish philosopher and Anglican priest, came to America in the hope of founding a university in Bermuda and converting the Indians. He never reached Bermuda, where within a few years no Indians were left. Instead he settled in Newport, Rhode Island, one of the few places in New England that was hospitable to Anglicans. There his lively mind and sympathetic spirit involved him in a great variety of interests, though he stayed only thirty-three months.
"Westward the Course of Empire takes its Way," Berkeley wrote, and these words inspired Americans both as British colonists and later as citizens of a new nation. Berkeley, in spite of his disappointment over the much-vexed Bermuda project, never flagged in his concern for the spiritual and intellectual life of the New World. The presence of the distinguished churchman gave heart to embattled Anglicans in Puritan New England. Through his close friendship with New Haven's Samuel Johnson, Berkeley did much to encourage both that faith and the town's recently founded college. Harvard also benefited from his generosity. But Berkeley's enduring influence on the cultural life of America is attested all the way from Yale's Berkeley College to Berkeley, California, the site of another great university.
This book is a graceful and authoritative account of an important episode in the life of a major philosopher and influential figure in the religious life of colonial New England.

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Contents

1730
1
The Dean of Derry and the Somer Isles
19
Philosopher in Residence
52
Charity and Humanity
81
The Church and the Word
105
Apologist in Absentia
134
1780
163
Epilogue
196
A Note on the Sources
213
Copyright

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