Abstract
Although Henry Lee is often recognized to be an important early critic of
Locke's 'way of ideas', his Anti-Scepticism (1702) has hardly received the
scholarly attention it deserves. This paper seeks to fill that lacuna. It
argues that Lee's criticism of Locke's alleged representationalism was
original, and that it was quite different from the more familiar kind of
criticism that was launched against Locke's theory of ideas by such thinkers
as John Sergeant and Thomas Reid. In addition, the paper offers an
interpretation of Lee’s claim that, pace Locke, attempts to prove the
veridicality of our cognitive apparatus are fundamentally misguided.