Thomas Reid

These facts...give reason to apprehend that Descartes system of the human understanding,
which I shall beg leave to call the idea system, and which...is now generally received,
has some original defect; that this skepticism is inlaid in it, and reared along with it;
and, therefore, that we must lay it open to the foundation and examine the materials,
before we can expect to raise any solid and useful fabric of knowledge on this subject.
But is this to be despaired of, because DesCartes ad his followers failed?
By no means...
A traveller of good judgment may mistake his way, and be unawares led into a wrong track;
and, while the road is fair before him, he may go on withiout suspicison and be followed by others;
but, when it ends in a coal pit, it requires no great judgment to know that he has gone wrong,
nor perhaps to find out what misled him.

The Philosophical Works, William Hamilton, ed. (2 vols)

Primary Sources:
Dugald Stewart's Account of the Life and Writings of Thomas Reid
Letters
A. Inquiry into the Human Mind
B. Essays on the Intellectual Powers of Man
C. Essays on the Active Powers of the Human Mind
D. Account of Aristotle's Logic
E. Essay on Quantity
F. Account of the University of Glasgow
Supplementary Dissertations:
A. On the Philosophy of Common Sense, or,
Our Primary Beliefs Considered as the Ultimate Criterion of Truth
B. Of Presentative and Representative Knowledge
C. On the Various Theories of External Perception
D. Distinction of the Primary and Secondary Qualities of Body
E. On the Correlative Apprehensions of Colour, and of Extension and Figure
F. On Locke's Notion of the Creation of Matter
G. On the History of the Word Idea
H. On Consciousness
I. On the History of the Terms Consciousness, Attention, and Reflection
K. That the Terms Image, Impression, Type &c., in Philosophical Theories of Perception,
are not to be Taken Literally
l. On the Platonic Doctrine of Perception
M. On the Doctrine of Species, as Held by Aristotle and the Aristotelians
N. The Cartesian Theory of Perception and Ideas
O. Locke's Opinion about Ideas
P. On Malebranche's Theory
Q. On Hume's Assertion about the Ideas of Power and Cause, and Browne's Criticism of Reid
R. On the Cartesian Doubt
S. On Reid's Borrowing from Gassendi the Opinion of Alexander and the Nominalists
T. On the Quality of Necessity as a Criterion of the Originality of a Cognition
U. On the Argument from Prescience against Liberty
V. On Scientia Media
W. The Sciences of Observation to be Studied Before Those of Reflection
X. On the Difference Between Conceptions and Intuitions