Damien Barnes

Damien Barnes
Graduate Student in Residence

Office Hours

By appointment

Office Location

SH 4431X

Specialization

 
Research Interests

Early Modern Philosophy,
Action Theory,
Ancient Philosophy,
Ethics,
Philosophy of Religion,
Medieval Philosophy,
Buddhist Philosophy

 

Education

  • University of California, Santa Barbara, Ph.D. degree candidate, Philosophy, expected 2021
  • University of California, Santa Barbara, M.A., Philosophy, 2018
  • Salisbury University, B.A., Philosophy/English (double major), summa cum laude, 2014

Research

Dissertation: “Berkeleyan Mereology: Acts, Agents, and Objects”

Committee: Thomas Holden (Chair), Voula Tsouna, Kevin Falvey

Abstract: George Berkeley advocated an extreme form of idealism. That is, Berkeley suggested that the totality of what exists is mind-dependent or, put another way, that nothing exists that does not exist in a mind. In my dissertation, I respond to a perennial objection to Berkeley’s case for idealism: the objection that his case rests on conflating the acts of perceiving sensible objects with the objects perceived. The charge here is that, in conflating the two, the derived notion that perceived objects are mind-dependent rests on fallacious reasoning. In defending Berkeley against this objection, I contend that the unity of acts and objects is a central plank in his case for idealism rather than the result of muddled reasoning. In mounting my defense, I provide novel interpretations of both Berkeley’s theory of perception and his theory of causation.