"Very many philosophers, perhaps a majority, have held that there is nothing real except minds and their ideas. Such philosophers are called 'idealists'. When they come to explaining matter, they either say, like Berkeley, that matter is really nothing but a collection of ideas, or they say, like Leibniz (1646-1716), that what appears as matter is really a collection of more or less rudimentary minds. But these philosophers, though they deny matter as opposed to mind, nevertheless, in another sense, admit matter. ...both Berkeley and Leibniz admit that there is a real table, but Berkeley says it is certain ideas in the mind of God, and Leibniz says it is a colony of souls. ...In fact, almost all philosophers seem to be agreed that there is a real table. They almost all agree that, however much our sense-data... may depend upon us, yet their occurrence is a sign of something existing independently of us, something differing, perhaps, completely from our sense-data..."
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The Problems of Philosophy
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