The Conduct of the Understanding
Author: John Locke
Publisher:
Published: 1802
Total Pages: 184
ISBN-13:
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Author: John Locke
Publisher:
Published: 1802
Total Pages: 184
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: John Locke
Publisher:
Published: 1693
Total Pages: 290
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA work by John Locke about education.
Author: John Locke
Publisher:
Published: 2020
Total Pages: 391
ISBN-13: 9787532783083
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Nathan Tarcov
Publisher: Lexington Books
Published: 1999
Total Pages: 292
ISBN-13: 9780739100851
DOWNLOAD EBOOKLocke's Education for Liberty presents an analysis of the crucial but often underestimated place of education and the family within Lockean liberalism. Nathan Tarcov shows that Locke's neglected work Some Thoughts Concerning Education compares with Plato's Republic and Rousseau's Emile as a treatise on education embodying a comprehensive vision of moral and social life. Locke believed that the family can be the agency, not the enemy, of individual liberty and equality. Tarcov's superb reevaluation reveals to the modern reader a breadth and unity heretofore unrecognized in Locke's thought.
Author: Victor Nuovo
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 2017
Total Pages: 276
ISBN-13: 019880055X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKEarly modern Europe was the birthplace of the modern secular outlook. During the seventeenth century nature and human society came to be regarded in purely naturalistic, empirical ways, and religion was made an object of critical historical study. John Locke was a central figure in all these events. This study of his philosophical thought shows that these changes did not happen smoothly or without many conflicts of belief: Locke, in the role of Christian Virtuoso, endeavoured to resolve them. He was an experimental natural philosopher, a proponent of the so-called 'new philosophy', a variety of atomism that emerged in early modern Europe. But he was also a practising Christian, and he professed confidence that the two vocations were not only compatible, but mutually sustaining. He aspired, without compromising his empirical stance, to unite the two vocations in a single philosophical endeavour with the aim of producing a system of Christian philosophy.
Author: Elizabeth A. Pritchard
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Published: 2013-12-04
Total Pages: 247
ISBN-13: 0804788871
DOWNLOAD EBOOKJohn Locke's theory of toleration is generally seen as advocating the privatization of religion. This interpretation has become conventional wisdom: secularization is widely understood as entailing the privatization of religion, and the separation of religion from power. This book turns that conventional wisdom on its head and argues that Locke secularizes religion, that is, makes it worldly, public, and political. In the name of diverse citizenship, Locke reconstructs religion as persuasion, speech, and fashion. He insists on a consensus that human rights are sacred insofar as humans are the creatures, and thus, the property of God. Drawing on a range of sources beyond Locke's own writings, Pritchard portrays the secular not as religion's separation from power, but rather as its affiliation with subtler, and sometimes insidious, forms of power. As a result, she captures the range of anxieties and conflicts attending religion's secularization: denunciations of promiscuous bodies freed from patriarchal religious and political formations, correlations between secular religion and colonialist education and conversion efforts, and more recently, condemnations of the coercive and injurious force of unrestricted religious speech.
Author: John Dunn
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 1982-09-09
Total Pages: 308
ISBN-13: 1316583155
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis study provides a comprehensive reinterpretation of the meaning of Locke's political thought. John Dunn restores Locke's ideas to their exact context, and so stresses the historical question of what Locke in the Two Treatises of Government was intending to claim. By adopting this approach, he reveals the predominantly theological character of all Locke's thinking about politics and provides a convincing analysis of the development of Locke's thought. In a polemical concluding section, John Dunn argues that liberal and Marxist interpretations of Locke's politics have failed to grasp his meaning. Locke emerges as not merely a contributor to the development of English constitutional thought, or as a reflector of socio-economic change in seventeenth-century England, but as essentially a Calvinist natural theologian.
Author: John Locke
Publisher:
Published: 1706
Total Pages: 348
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: John Locke
Publisher:
Published: 1796
Total Pages: 86
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: James Tully
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 1993-03-18
Total Pages: 354
ISBN-13: 9780521436380
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAn Approach to Political Philosophy: Locke in Context brings together Professor Tully's most important and innovative statements on Locke in a systematic treatment of the latter's thought that is at once contextual and critical. Each essay has been rewritten and expanded for this volume, and each seeks to understand a theme of Locke's political philosophy by interpreting it in light of the complex contexts of early modern European political thought and practice. These historical studies are then used in a variety of ways to gain critical perspectives on the assumptions underlying current debates in political philosophy and the history of political thought. The themes treated include government, toleration, discipline, property, aboriginal rights, individualism, power, labour, self-ownership, community, progress, liberty, participation, and revolution.