Empirical Philosophy of England
Experimental philosophy is the current most important thought in the new era in the West. This philosophy, which is basically an epistemological and scholastic philosophy about knowledge, is, on the one hand, the fruit of a phenomenon called the New West that emerged after the Renaissance, ie the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, and on the other hand, is the fundamentals of this event and the foundation of this great establishment. Therefore, to know the new West, one must start with the knowledge of empirical philosophy. The cradle of this philosophy is England. John Locke founded it in the seventeenth century, Berkeley developed it, and Hume made it mature. In this book, after a preparatory part about the emergence of this philosophy, during three sections, the views of all three mentioned philosophers are reported and explained in detail as well as a reference to their own books. And since philosophy is more than any other science the field of critique and conflict of opinions, those ideas after reporting and explaining, have been criticized.