In Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous, George Berkeley critiques the distinction between this property and its dependent counterpart that depends on sensation. For 10 points each:
[10m] Name these properties of objects that are “inseparable from the body” as defined by John Locke in a 1689 work. Examples of these observer-independent qualities include number, shape, and “solidity.”
ANSWER: primary qualities
[10e] Primary and secondary qualities are proposed in an essay concerning this subject by Locke that claims that the human mind is a tabula rasa. Hume discussed the missing shade of blue in an Enquiry Concerning this subject.
ANSWER: Human Understanding [accept An Essay Concerning Human Understanding or An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding; prompt on understanding]
[10h] This woman examined the “true grounds of morality” in a defence of Locke’s essay from critic Thomas Burnet. In a letter to Dr. Holdsworth, this woman attempts to vindicate John Locke’s “Christian Principles.”
ANSWER: Catharine Trotter Cockburn [or Catharine Trotter Cockburn (“CO-burn”)]
<Waterloo A, Philosophy>