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    In John Locke’s Second Treatise on Civil Government‚ Locke starts his political discourse with his views of the state of nature. The state of nature‚ as defined by Locke‚ is the state that all humans are naturally in before any political authority arises. Locke’s state of nature might not be the most pleasant state that a human being would wish to be in‚ yet Locke acknowledges that even humans in the state of nature have intrinsic rights. What would another thinker on political theory‚ Thomas Hobbes

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    Thomas Hobbes and John Locke are both undoubtedly two of the most well known and written about philosophers of all time. However‚ their theories and ideas on what society is‚ and what society should be should be differ drastically making them different as night and day. Thomas Hobbes had a rather dark view of society and the people in it‚ likely due to the political and civil unrest that he had experienced. This caused him to see humans as inherently hostile and that we are generally incapable

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    In the grand scheme of things‚ John Locke is a modern philosopher when compared to Plato‚ Homer‚ and the like. Even though Locke was not born thousands of years ago‚ he affected the world just as much as ancient philosophers. Locke’s philosophy contributed to the American Revolution then eventually played a large role in the formation of the United States of America and the nation’s Constitution. The right to life‚ liberty‚ and the pursuit of property were unheard of at Locke’s time. His philosophy

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    opposition. John Locke and Galileo Galilei both stated that God has endowed humans with reason to make rational choices. Both argue that each human should question ideas as they desire. Humans should not obey an authority figure without reason. Their ideas provided society with new ways of viewing life. “The second Treatise of Government” written by John Locke and “Science and Scripture” written by Galileo Galilei explain the importance of human rationality. According to John Locke‚ a successful

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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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    dis a) The ideas of John Locke and Thomas Hobbes heavily influenced the thinking of the writers of the U.S. Constitution. Both believed in a social contract‚ that is‚ that government exists at the consent of the governed‚ but Locke believed that people would naturally come together to govern themselves‚ while Hobbes believed they needed a strong authority (monarch) to bring them together. As you research to learn more about what these two philosophers thought about politics‚ which of their two

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    Independence Q: What the colonists sought in proclaiming independence from Great Britain was political power embodied in a A: Written constitution Q: ____ rights are based on nature and Providence A: Unalienable rights Q: Where were the essential rights demanded from the British-life‚ liberty‚ and property- derived from? A: Certain natural rights ordained by God Q: The principal goal of the American Revolution was ___ A: Liberty Q: One of the basic liberties sought by the colonists through

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    John Locke is a man who thought every man should be treated fair and equally no matter what. he wrote a pamphlet that stated his beliefs. Hes kind of like a founding father‚ but what is a founding father? A founding father is a member of the convention that drew up the united states constitution in 1787‚ which was 4 years after the american revolution‚ a political upheaval that took place between 1765 to 1783 when the 13 colonists rejected the british monarchy and founded the united states of america

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    current modern age effectively with their ideas. John Locke‚ Voltaire‚ Adam Smith and Mary Wollstonecraft. In the 1700s and 1800s‚ people wanted to hear them‚ they were not afraid what came for in consequences. In Document A‚ John Locke was a major source of inspiration for the enlightenment movement. John Locke was stating that all men are naturally in that state of perfect‚ freedom to order their actions‚ and dispose their possessions. John Locke believed that every human should have equality

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    Perhaps the most famous objection to view that all ideas derive from sense experience is that this is impossible. Both Locke and Hume appear to assume that sense experience gives us discrete ideas directly. As first examples of simple ideas‚ Locke lists ‘Yellow‚ White‚ Heat‚ Cold‚ Soft‚ Hard‚ Bitter‚ Sweet’ (Essay II.I.3). He supposes that what makes all experiences of yellow experiences of yellow is objective patterns of similarity between the experiences – yellow things all look ‘the same’. For

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