John Locke of Poor Reform and Workhouses The reading for this week addresses Locke’s understanding of the relationship between the poor and the capable citizens in society. He stated explicitly in his second treatise on government‚ the importance of work and labor in order to assess a person’s worth. Locke believes that man is not meant to be idle and that the purpose of existence is to live in the image of God and work towards a life of moral bounds and labor upon the earth making it more beneficial
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thoughts on this. Hobbes believed we are all naturally evil and should be contained. Locke believed humans are reasonable and can rule themselves. I think humans are naturally evil‚ but Locke brings up some valid points as well. Hobbes states that without a government there would be nothing but chaos. Even though there are sizable amounts of good people‚ the bad would find ways to control‚ torture‚ or do other evil things before good could act. A single strong ruler like Hobbes believes is the way
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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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teachings in Politics. In this text‚ among many other topics‚ Aristotle discusses the accumulation‚ evolution‚ and usefulness of money in the form of a common coin. In addition to this‚ there is also a similar discussion of money in John Locke’s Second Treatise of Government. Locke was an English philosopher and physician born in 1632. His Second Treatise of Government is still widely considered one of the most well written pieces of political theory in history. In both of these texts‚ the
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John Locke was born on August 29‚ 1632 in Wrington‚ Somerset‚ England. He is known as an English thinker whose works lie at the establishment of current philosophical experimentation and political radicalism. John Locke was a standout amongst the most significant and persuasive philosopher ever. The French Enlightenment and the Founding Fathers of the American Revolution drew intensely on his thoughts. He placed a great part of the preparation for the Enlightenment and made focal commitments to the
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A person cannot talk about John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau first defining what each contract theorist means when he talks about the state of nature. For Locke‚ his state of nature involves “ungoverned humans pursuing their individual interests with respect for one another’s rights and even cooperate with one another with their interests overlap” (Portis‚ p. 103). These ungoverned humans are rational‚ resources are unconditional‚ and there is no threat from any external source. In Rousseau’s
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natural rights can vary from person to person‚ but they all represent a few major inborn rights. John Locke places his ideologies upon the reasoning that natural rights are the foundation of the society we live within. If any natural right acquires some type of restriction‚ the person who has had their rights violated can take necessary steps to replace what they have lost in the state of nature. Locke writes over several circumstances that raise questions as to why an individual can kill another
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love‚ and personal identity. Two particular philosophers who hypothesized about personal identity were René Descartes and John Locke. René Descartes was born in a small town in France in 1596‚ and lived until 1650 when he died at the age of 53. He was a philosopher‚
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1. John Locke was a proponent of the separation of church and state. Locke mentions the differences between civil government and the church. The government’s primary goal is to protect external interests‚ such as life and liberty. The church‚ on the other hand‚ protects internal interests‚ such as salvation. Since religion is such a personal matter‚ Locke believed that the government should not force any one to convert to a religion. A person cannot be forced into believing something that they do
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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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