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    have precedent in late Aristolelianism and earlier philosophers like St. Augustine. Descartes was a major figure in 17th century continental rationalism‚ later advocated by Baruch Spinoza and opposed by the empiricist school of thought consisting of Locke‚ Berkeley‚ and Hume. His most famous statement is: Cogito ergo sum‚ translation in English I think therefore I am. Descartes employs a method called metaphysical doubt‚ sometimes also referred to as methodological skepticism: he rejects any ideas

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    According to John Locke‚ private property is a natural right because the ownership of things is the only means by which a person can sustain himself or herself in physical comfort. Even though the natural condition of everything on earth and in it is that of common ownership‚ without a prior personal claim by any human being‚ people cannot make use of any of these things unless a certain method of appropriation is utilized. This method of appropriation‚ according to Locke‚ is labor. The definition

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    Hobbes‚ Locke‚ Montesquieu‚ and Rousseau on Government  Starting in the 1600s‚ European philosophers began debating the question of who  should govern a nation. As the absolute rule of kings weakened‚ Enlightenment  philosophers argued for different forms of democracy.      Thomas Hobbes: Man of the State  Locke: The Reluctant Democrat  Montesquieu: The Balanced Democrat  Rousseau: The Extreme Democrat      Thomas Hobbes: Man of the State  In 1649‚ a civil war broke out over who would rule England—Parliament or King Charles 

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    The two passages dealt with religious tolerance‚ each from a different perspective. The first passage‚ John Locke’s "A Letter Concerning Toleration" from 1689‚ was written from the viewpoint of a man under a king’s rule in England. The second passage‚ "The Blind Men and the Elephant‚" is a Buddhist parable. Locke’s reasoning for religious tolerance is all over the place. He first explains that no man has any right to enforce his beliefs on another man‚ stating that faith comes from within one’s

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    Locke continues with a notion that the “mixing of one’s labour” via cultivating‚ tilling‚ tending or improving conditions of something once in a natural state developing property of the men in common to private property of a person. “Every man has a property in his own person and nobody has any right to but himself” (27)11). Our right to self governance and control over our labor emphasizing mastery of one’s plans and endeavors it follows that property is needed not for merely survival in particular

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    preceding‚ and King James II being overthrown‚ the time was prime for John Locke to speak out. John Locke wrote the book Two Treatises of Government and A Letter Concerning Toleration as written proof of his personal opinion. He speaks out to the reader precisely about his feelings and why he is argumentative against others views. Locke’s purpose in writing this book was to not only attack Sir Robert Filmer’s “Patriarcha (Locke Page 7)” in the First Treatise‚ but to speak out to the community about

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    The Declaration is rooted in natural law. Natural rights were part of natural law that in turn was part of God’s law. John Locke summarized God given rights as‚ “life liberty and property.”X In the Declaration‚ Thomas Jefferson would later extend Locke’s paraphrasing to “Life‚ liberty‚ and the pursuit of happiness.” The Declaration states in the course of human events when it becomes necessary to dissolve political bands and assume “the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and

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    a military dictator had run rampant over England’s government. Starting with James I‚ the English monarchy traversed to Charles I‚ Oliver Cromwell‚ Charles II‚ James II‚ and finally William III. With the ascensions of Cromwell and William III‚ drastic events changed the course of England’s history‚ as well as influencing two famous philosophical men. Thomas Hobbes‚ author of Leviathan‚ and John Locke‚ author of Second Treatise on Civil Government‚ drew on their experiences of England’s monarchical

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    ‘The director of a company owes a fiduciary duty to the company’. Do you agree with this statement? Introduction A company is a distinct legal entity created by statute. Companies have many of the same legal rights and obligations as do individuals. They can own and sell property‚ they can hold profits or acquire debts‚ they can enter into contracts and sue or be sued‚ and governments can tax them. Companies are advantageous primarily because they become legal entities that are separate and

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    John Locke and John Stuart Mill’s Definition of Freedom John Locke believes that man ought to have more freedom in political society than John Stuart Mill does. John Locke’s The Second Treatise of Government and John Stuart Mill’s On Liberty are influential and potent literary works which while outlining the conceptual framework of each thinkers ideal state present two divergent visions of the very nature of man and his freedom. John Locke and John Stuart Mill have different views regarding how

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