Two Treatises of Government and A Letter Concerning TolerationYale University Press, 1 thg 1, 2003 - 358 trang Two of Locke’s most mature and influential political writings and three brilliant interpretive essays combined in an outstanding volume "The new standard edition of Locke for students of political theory. Dunn, Grant, and Shapiro combine authoritative historical scholarship and contemporary political theory to give us Locke for our time."—Elisabeth H. Ellis, Texas A&M University Among the most influential writings in the history of Western political thought, John Locke’s Two Treatises of Government and A Letter Concerning Toleration remain vital to political debates today, more than three centuries after they were written. The complete texts appear in this volume, accompanied by interpretive essays by three prominent Locke scholars. Ian Shapiro’s introduction places Locke’s political writings in historical and biographical context. John Dunn explores both the intellectual context in which Locke wrote the Two Treatises of Government and A Letter Concerning Toleration and the major interpretive controversies surrounding their meaning. Ruth Grant offers a comprehensive discussion of Locke’s views on women and the family, and Shapiro contributes an essay on the democratic elements of Locke’s political theory. Taken together, the texts and essays in this volume offer invaluable insights into the history of ideas and the enduring influence of Locke’s political thought. |
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... man's natural freedom , he should do it by a bare supposition of Adam's authority , without offering any proof for ... man prince of his posterity , " must be taken for proofs and reasons drawn from Scripture , or for any sort of proof ...
... man's being possessed of any thing more natural , nor more certain , than to say , it is delivered into his hands . And ver . 3 , to show , that they had then given them the utmost property man is capable of , which is to have a right ...
... man's property may be altered and enlarged , as we see it here , after the flood , when other uses of them are ... man , the whole species of man , as the chief inhabitant , who is the image of his Maker , the dominion over the other ...
... man, who preferred being his subject to starving. And the man he thus submits to, can pretend to no more power over him than he has con- sented to, upon compact. Upon this ground a man's having his stores filled in a time of scarcity ...
... man's body , and in that operation wherein life consists in the whole . And doth the rude ploughman , or the more ignorant voluptuary , frame or fashion such an admirable engine as this is , and then put life and sense into it ? Can any man ...
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