"Kant vs locke" Essays and Research Papers

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    a few days of an affliction so painful that for those few days before death you would be reduced to howling like a dog‚” (Bonevac‚ 460) you probably would not universally will the latter choice. Furthermore‚ as Roger Sullivan explains “according to Kant‚ our moral reason recognizes in an objective and disinterested way that we are not only persons having intrinsic worth but also finite beings with needs to be met‚ and it insists on the strict right of all human beings not only to strive for but to

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    John Locke is one of Britain’s foremost philosophers‚ and‚ at least in terms of political theory‚ one of the most influential modern philosophers as well. Although there have been arguments made against the true extent of his impact‚ it is generally agreed that many of the founders of the United States took his views into account while founding the government. Since that time many countries have taken his works‚ such a Second Treatise of Government‚ into account when reshaping their own system. However

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    John Locke was born in Wrington ‚ Somerset ‚ England on August 29 1704 to John Locke and Agnes Keene ‚ who were both Puritans (Uzgalis 2001 ‚ Wikipedia 2006 ‚ Microsoft Encarta 2006 . His father ‚ after whom he was named ‚ served as captain of cavalry for the Parliamentarian forces in the early part of the English Civil War . His family later moved to Pensford and Locke grew up in a rural Tudor house in Belluton . He attended the Westminster School in London in 1647 under Alexander Popham ‚ a member

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    Hobbes and Locke Philosophy is something that is hard to give the definition; it can be seen as a value‚ a way people trying to make sense to the material world‚ a tool people use to explain incidents. Thomas Hobbes and John Locke are both English philosophers‚ they have a huge influence in poetical philosophy‚ both of them have discussed terms ‘state of nature’ and ‘contracts’; which could be seen as a term people use when discussing power‚ state‚ law‚ rights and obey. Hobbes and Locke both agreed

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    Thomas Hobbes and John Locke were very different Enlightenment philosophers.They had many similarities and differences on what form of government they should form for the people.For example Thomas Hobbes believed in a powerful government‚and John Locke believed in a limited government where the government should protect the people’s natural rights. Both of these philosophers were seventeen century enlightenment thinkers.Thomas Hobbes and John Locke had very different points of view on how the government

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    Machiavelli‚ Hobbes‚ and Locke are clearly distinguished from the ancient thinkers‚ this paper will argue that some of the ideas of Plato and Aristotle continued so for modern theorists. Primarily‚ this paper will recap the influences of Machiavelli‚ Hobbes‚ and Locke.

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    for your position. Out of all the political philosophers that I read about‚ I think Locke had the greatest influence on society and government today. John Locke influenced society with his idea that all babies are born “clean slates”. Even today‚ many people still believe that the environment in which a child grows up in is what forms him or her into the person they become later on in life. Another idea Locke had that influenced society was the belief regarding political freedom. Having political

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    Candide Free-will-agent Determine the course of action Leibniz Cause-effect Nature catastrophe disaster=knowledge Good and bad=moral Third person Good may distance readers from the protagonist/hero Genealogy Chain reaction‚ trace back the origin Disease: syphilisparody of genealogy love and cause and effect become questionable El Dorado The best‚ utopia Good: no material wealth‚ all in agreement‚ knowledge/gallery‚ safe (very hard to reach and surrounded by mountains)‚ open

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    Locke on consent and tacit consent Note for Philosophy 166 Locke holds that one becomes obligated to obey political authorities only by one’s free and voluntary consent. Or does he? Locke: “The difficulty is‚ what ought to be looked upon as tacit consent‚ and how far it binds‚ i.e. how far any one shall be looked on to have consented‚ and thereby submitted to any government‚ where he has made no expressions of it at all.” Locke‚ later: “And to this I say that every man‚ that hath any possession

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    Chapter I Introduction and Review of Related Literature In the article; religion as a Dimension in Man’s spiritual Life by Paul Tillich‚ I came across with this phrase that‚ “With respect to God‚ man is a receptive and only receptive. He has no freedom to relate to the doctrine of the Bondage of the Will.” I get enterested to the word Will which I think present in the human mind and perhaps‚ in God. In this paper‚ I want to discuss and present the difference between the will ‘of God’ and of

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