"John locke and machiavelli" Essays and Research Papers

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    In his Second Treatise on Law and Government‚ John Locke outlines clear and coherent standards for what constitutes a legitimate government and what persons one such government would have authority over. Both are determined by citizens’ acts of consenting to relinquish to the government part of their natural authority over their own conduct. Unfortunately‚ the situation becomes much less clear once we consider how his standards would apply to the political situation existing in the real world today

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    Thomas More‚ Niccolo Machiavelli‚ and John Calvin are three theorists who share and justify their views on the relationship between the state and religion. More‚ the Catholic‚ Machiavelli‚ a critic of the Catholic Church‚ and Calvin‚ the Protestant‚ all believe that religion is a very important element of the state. However‚ More and Calvin also believe that religion can constrain rulers as well as support them‚ which ultimately leads to their conclusion that the arbitrary use of power by the state

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    Locke

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    experience whatever is the mind got there through the senses. Locke was an empiricist who held that the mind was tabula rasa or a blank slate at birth to be written upon by sensory experience. Empiricism is opposed to rationalism or the view that mental ideas and knowledge exist in the mind prior to experience that there are abstract or innate ideas. George Berkeley argued against rationalism and materialism. He also criticized Locke on many points. He said most philosophers make an assumption that

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    John Locke was a profound philosopher who shaped modern philosophy. One of John Locke’s therories is that when a child is born they start their life on a “blank state”. He theorized the way people act and think is based on experiences they had when they were younger. People who had good experiences turned out good and people with bad experiences turned out bad. However‚ not everyone with those experiences turns out to be the person that they were projected to be. There is evidence in Mary Shelley’s

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    1. a. Locke denies innate principles‚ as there are no principles to which all mankind give a universal assent. He begins his denial of innate principles by stating that “Universal consent proves nothing innate” (pg. 319‚ 3.). With this statement he claims that even if there were universal principles that all mankind agreed with‚ this would still not prove these principles innate if there could be any way to show how those in agreement came to consent to these ideas. But‚ for Locke‚ there are no universal

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    were John Locke‚ François-Marie Arouet‚ Jean-Jacques Rousseau‚ and Charles-Louis de Secondat. Thomas Hobbes also contributed greatly to the philosophy of the time‚ however‚ his ideas were oppositional to those of the enlightened thinkers‚ adopting a viewpoint

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    power‚ authority and legitimacy. [Spragen‚ 1997‚20]. These concepts are explored through the perspectives of Niccolo Machiavelli who provides insight on power‚ John Locke who states the manner in which authority( the right to rule) is established‚ Thomas Hobbes‚ who shares the means in which authority’s maintained and Plato with his idea of legitimacy- rightfulness in rule. Machiavelli wrote an ontological political thesis of what power is observing that the manifestation of social conflict was because

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    1. Locke is arguing that even though God created matter; out of all the matter there is that can produce material things; those material things do not know God exists. Material substances as well as ourselves are not made to last eternally. Therefore‚ a person should not find satisfaction in materialistic things. Another part of Locke’s argument that I noticed is that a person cannot rely on these things to please God. Matter is constantly changing into different forms; while God does not. If we

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    nature was created by philosopher John Locke‚ which is relevant to the kids on the island from Lord of the flies. Lord of the flies is a movie about kids who were in a plane crash and landed on an island. They began to make a democracy and government‚ but they changed into an anarchy because the rules were not followed. John Locke would have been ashamed of life on the island because the rights of life‚ liberty‚ and property were not respected. The first reason John Locke would have been ashamed of life

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    Introduction Two of the most noted and influential modern political thinkers are John Locke and Karl Marx. John Locke was an English philosopher who was famous for his use of empiricism and his social contract theories. After graduating from Christ Church College in Oxford‚ he worked there as a philosophy lecturer. He also studied medicine and various fields of science. In 1675‚ John Locke traveled to France‚ where he met with French scientists and philosophers. He spent four years in France

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