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    Hobbes and Locke

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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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    Both John Locke and Thomas Reid make captivating remarks about personal identity and its ability to either span effortlessly through time or encounter instances where personal identity undergoes modification no longer allowing personal identity to be maintained through time. Locke offers an interesting perspective as he so eloquently cites what he believes the word person to signify and what he believes personal identity to be composed of‚ in this case consciousness or as Reid prefers to call it

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    state and only giving them enough power to protect the rights of their wellbeing. Hobbs states that once the people had given the power to the state that they had given up all their rights‚ which was the price that they would have to pay to be safe. Locke also believed that man lived in the “State of Nature” but it was different then Hobbs. Locke’s believed that it was peaceful‚ and that men did have rights. There was not an appointed

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    In the eighteenth century philosophers John Locke and Francious-Marie Arouet.supported the idea of religious toleration. Locke philosophy was that people were born good or pure. According to Locke‚ people were generally good that they should be allowed more rights and freedoms. In which also his philosophy was that people were entitled to three natural rights (life‚ liberty‚ and own property which he defended. Locket said in the letter concerning toleration. “Civil interests I call life‚ liberty

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    Locke on Substance

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    29th‚ 2013 Abstract: First‚ I explore John Locke’s conception of substance. After‚ I argue that Locke’s theory of substance is necessary for his theory of identity‚ and therefore philosophically vital for Locke’s ethical and political theories. I consider objections to Locke‚ but ultimately defend Locke’s theory of substance and its primacy in Locke’s overall philosophy through a different interpretive approach. Locke’s Substrata: John Locke’s doctrine of substratum—a metaphysical

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    Locke‚ Berkeley & Hume Enlightenment began with an unparalleled confidence in human reason. The new science’s success in making clear the natural world through Locke‚ Berkeley‚ and Hume affected the efforts of philosophy in two ways. The first is by locating the basis of human knowledge in the human mind and its encounter with the physical world. Second is by directing philosophy’s attention to an analysis of the mind that was capable of such cognitive success. John Locke set the tone for enlightenment

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    John Locke believes in the Imago Dei‚ that is the belief that humans are made in the image and likeness of God. Since humans are believed to be created in the image and likeness of God‚ Locke proposed that the value of the individual is justified by the authority of God. This means that God gave humans the exclusive right to their body and because there is value in their body then there is value in their labor. From this‚ Locke reasoned that people have a right to private property which is taking

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    Locke and Hobbes

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    Locke and Hobbes Thomas Hobbes and John Locke are two famous philosophers who existed during the seventeenth and eighteenth century. The two men had divergent views pertaining to the nature of man and the ideal forms of government. While both men’s ideas were proven true‚ they did reflect on their personal experiences basing on the period of times in which they existed. Their beliefs impacted on the world around them‚ and they have continued to shape governances throughout history. Though both men’s

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    Locke’s writings were influenced by the changes in the English government at the time‚ which had become a constitutional monarchy with a powerful Parliament‚ exemplifying Locke’s belief that the monarch did not hold the divine right to rule‚ and that the people were justified in reforming a government which did not serve them well. Through most of the seventeenth century‚ the English Parliament and the Crown struggled for power; this came to head in the English Civil War of ‚ when Charles I was beheaded

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    Politics and Individual Rights: John Locke John Locke is considered one of the most influential thinkers of the Age of Enlightenment. Locke’s ideas had a major impact on political thought‚ especially in France. He grew up in England with his father who was a country lawyer‚ and his mother‚ both of which were Puritans. Locke started his education as a King’s Scholar at the Westminster School in London‚ and then proceeded to the Christ Church‚ Oxford. He was more interested in the modern philosophers

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