Relations (1)

cross_type 0.20 — supporting 2 facts

George Berkeley is explicitly linked to the concept of Panpsychism through his philosophical rejection of the theory [1] and his inclusion as a related entry in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy's discourse on the subject [2].

Facts (2)

Sources
Panpsychism - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org Wikipedia 1 fact
perspectiveGeorge Berkeley rejected panpsychism, arguing instead that the physical world exists only within the experiences that minds have of it, while restricting the definition of minds to humans and specific other agents.
Panpsychism - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu William Seager, Sean Allen-Hermanson · Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
referenceThe Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on Panpsychism lists related entries including George Berkeley, consciousness, René Descartes, dualism, emergent properties, epiphenomenalism, Charles Hartshorne, William James, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, mereology, monism, neutral monism, pantheism, physicalism, qualia, quantum theory and consciousness, Josiah Royce, Baruch Spinoza, Alfred North Whitehead, and Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt.