[605] Cf. W. i. pp. 318, 322. When Kant cites Hume in the Prolegomena (Introduction), the reference is to the German translation.
[606] This was the first of Berkeley’s writings to appear in German. The translation was published in Leipzig in 1781.
[607] Cf. below, pp. 307-8. The opposite view has, however, been defended by Vaihinger: Philos. Monatshefte, 1883, p. 501 ff.
[608] Enquiry Concerning the Human Understanding (sec. xii. pt. ii. at the end).
[609] Sixth edition, pp. 132, 214, 243 ff.
[610] A 38.
[611] A 377.
[612] A 377-8. Though Kant here distinguishes between perceptions and their “outer objects,” the latter are none the less identified with mental representations.
[613] Cf. below, p. 305 ff.
[614] Prolegomena, § 13, Remark III.; and Anhang (W. iv. p. 374).