Abstract
This is an excellent book about a variety of themes in seventeenth-century philosophy. Unlike books that try to do too much and succeed at little, this one claims to do a single thing but accomplishes much more than that. Jolley sets out to explore various views about ideas, primarily in the work of Descartes, Malebranche, and Leibniz, but also in others, such as Locke and Arnauld. He does so by examining the contexts in which the "way of ideas" occurs, from innateness to causality to religious issues, in a variety of debates and encounters between these various philosophers. The result is not a comprehensive treatment of the doctrine of ideas in the seventeenth century; figures such as Hobbes and Spinoza are largely excluded and the treatment of Locke and others is very selective. But Jolley does provide something extremely valuable: an engaging and stimulating tour of a series of fascinating philosophical debates which constitute central dimensions of the seventeenth-century philosophical tradition.