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    John Locke‚ a philosopher of the Age of Reason and the Enlightenment‚ greatly influenced the American revolution and the French revolution. His beliefs were the social contract‚ natural rights‚ and the right of revolution. One of John Locke’s beliefs was the social contract. A social contract can be either a written or unwritten agreement between a government and its people. Social contracts usually contain a basic set of laws and agreements explaining how the country should be run. Examples

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    individuals should do. And following the exploration of doubt‚ the human mind became the arbiter of truth. One of these key thinkers was John Locke‚ who presented his own ideas about morality and individualism. Locke has both a philosophical and political point of view. He takes an optimistic approach toward human nature. In “An Essay Concerning Human Understanding”‚ Locke detailed his view that all knowledge is learned through experience and because of this people are inherently good. He discusses how

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    Revolution came to par because of the recent events that occurred in the Americas. In the Americas there was a Revolution before the French Revolution occurred. John Locke is one of many philosophers that help carry out the French Revolution. John Locke teachings helped the Americans and the French during the revolutions positively. Locke believed that the government’s duty was to protect the rights of the citizens.Locke believed all people were born free and equal with 3 natural rights. The 3 natural

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    John Locke vs. Thomas Hobbes The new ways of thinking developed during the scientific revolution began to extend into other areas of life beyond that of just science. Scholars and philosophers began to rethink the old ideas about religion‚ economics‚ and education. The Enlightenment started from key ideas put forth by two English political thinkers of the 1600s‚ Thomas Hobbes and John Locke. Both men experienced hardships England early in that century in the English civil war but they ended up getting

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    In 1689 John Locke wrote An Essay Concerning Human Understanding. In his essay‚ he analyzes the human mind at the start of birth. He argues questions about how one thinks and perceives. He believes the mind starts out as a “tabula rasa‚” meaning a blank tablet‚ at birth and as we begin to experience things through our senses our mind begins to form. Author’s Viewpoint John Locke is considered one of the first British empiricists. Empiricisms is the belief that knowledge is from sense-experience

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    As a political scientist one of the most important questions to ask is‚ “What should the aim of government in society be and why?” To answer this question I will examine the perspectives of three philosophers‚ Thomas Aquinas‚ Thomas Hobbes‚ and John Locke‚ in regards to their views on government’s role and obligation in a society. To understand and define the aim of government in society the best form of government must first be defined. The best form of government will be defined using Plato’s teaching’s

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    Philosophers and the Bill of Rights The philosophers René Descartes‚ John Locke‚ and Immanuel Kant significantly influence the Bill of Rights. Descartes’ a French philosopher‚ whose ideas where considered to be modern‚ was the father of rationalism and theoretical sequence. His four logics are “avoid precipitation and prejudice in judgment (…) divide up each of the difficulties (…) carry on reflection in due orders‚ and (…) enumerations so complete and reviews so general that I should be certain

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    Comparing John Locke against David Hume : Empiricism John Locke and David Hume‚ both great empiricist philosophers who radically changed the way people view ideas and how they come about. Although similar in their beliefs‚ the two have some quite key differences in the way they view empiricism. Locke believed in causality‚ and used the example of the mental observation of thinking to raise your arm‚ and then your arm raising‚ whereas Hume believed that causality is not something that can be known

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    What idea of John Locke influenced the American and French Revolutions? John Locke influenced the Americans and French Revolutions with his idea that formed the foundation of liberal democracy. 2. What is Empiricism? Empiricism is the theory of knowledge that addresses the limits of what we can comprehend about the nature of reality. Locke believed that our understanding of reality eventually originate from sense-experience

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    Thomas Hobbes and John Locke both sought to explain the behavior of humans in the purest form. In comparing and contrasting their theories‚ one begins to realize the extent to which these philosophers agreed and disagreed. While Hobbes states that human nature is malicious and requires a sovereign‚ Locke explains how humans are benelovant and pastoral with no motivation to advance. In Hobbes’ theory of a natural state‚ people live with no sense of government or law‚ forcing society into chaos and

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