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John Locke

John Locke. (1632-1704). John Locke was born on August 29, 1632 in Wrington, a village in Somerset, England. He was baptized the same day. Soon after Locke's birth, the family moved to the market town of  Pensford . Locke grew up in a rural  Tudor house in  Belluton. John Locke’s Parents.

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John Locke

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  1. John Locke

  2. (1632-1704)

  3. John Locke was born on • August 29, 1632 • in Wrington, a village in Somerset, England. • He was baptized the same day. Soon after Locke's birth, the family moved tothe market townof Pensford . • Locke grew up in a rural Tudorhousein Belluton.

  4. John Locke’s Parents • Locke's father, who was also named John Locke, • was a country lawyer and clerk to the Justices of the Peace in Chew Magna, • served as a captain of cavalry for the Parliamentarian forces during the early part of the English Civil War. • His mother, Agnes Keene, was a tanner's daughter and reputed to be very beautiful. • Both parents werePuritans.

  5. Education, Writings and Works • In 1646 (14), he went to Westminster school.(sponsored by Alexander Popham) • Westminster school arms

  6. In 1652 (20), to Christ Church in Oxford.

  7. Christ Church in Oxford. • One of the largest constituent colleges of the university of Oxford in England. • Produced 13 British Prime Ministers. • Setting For parts of: • Brides head revisited • Alice Adventures in Wonderland • Harry Potter • Northern Lights • The Golden Compass.

  8. In 1656 (24), Locke awarded bachelor’s degree. • 1658 (26), a master’s degree. • In 1659 (27) he was elected to a senior studentship, and tutored at the college for a number of years.

  9. Still, contrary to the curriculum, he complained that he would rather be studying Descartes than Aristotle. • Then, pursued at other universities and in The Royal Society.

  10. In 1666, he met Lord Anthony Ashley Cooper , 1st Earl of Shaftsburywho had come to Oxford seeking treatment for a liver infection. • Cooper was impressed with Locke and persuaded him to become part of his retinue.

  11. In 1667, Locke moved into Shaftesbury's home at Exeter House in London • to serve as Lord Ashley's personal physician. • In London, Locke resumed his medical studies under the tutelage ofThomas Sydenham. • Sydenham had a major effect on Locke's natural philosophical thinking – An Essay Concerning Human Understanding.

  12. Locke studied medicine withSydenham,one of the most notable English physicians of the 17th century. His skills in medicine led to an accidental encounter with Lord Ashley (later to become the Earl of Shaftesbury) in1666, which would mark a profound change in his career. • Locke became a member of Shaftesbury's household and assisted him in business, political and domestic matters.

  13. In 1672, the Earl of Shaftesbury's was made Lord Chancellor and Locke become his secretary to the board of trade until 1675, helping to shape his ideas on international trade and economics. • In 1668, he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society. • 1674 (42), he finally graduated as a bachelor of medicine.

  14. In 1675, he was appointed to a medical studentship at the college. • He owned a home in Oxford until 1684, until his studentship was taken from him by royal mandate.

  15. Robert Boyle, the leader of the Oxford scientific group, was Locke's mentor. • Boyle's mechanical philosophy saw the world as reducible to matter in motion. • Locke learned about atomism and took the terms“Primary and Secondary qualities". • Both Boyle and Locke, along with Newton, were members of the English Royal Society. • In 1688, Locke became friends with Newton after he had studied Newton's Principia Mathematica Philosophiae Naturalis.

  16. It was Locke's work with the Oxford scientists that gave him a critical perspective when reading Descartes. • Locke admired Descartes as an alternative to the Aristotelianism dominant at Oxford. • Descartes' “Way of Ideas" was a major influence on Locke's An Essay Concerning Human Understanding.

  17. Locke's ideason freedom of religion and the rights of citizenswere considered a challenge to the King's authority by the English government • … and in 1682 Locke went into exile in Holland.

  18. It was in Holland that he completed An Essay Concerning Human Understanding. • The English government tried to have Locke, along with a group of English revolutionaries with whom he was associated, extradited to England. • Locke's position at Oxford was taken from him in 1684.

  19. In 1685, while Locke was still in Holland, Charles II died and was succeeded by James II who was eventually overthrown by rebels. • William of Orange was invited to bring a Dutch force to England • while James II went into exile in France. Known as the Glorious Revolution of 1688. • This event marks the change in the dominant power in English government from King to Parliament. • In 1688 Locke return to England on the same ship that carried Princess Mary to join her husband William.

  20. Locke concerned not only in Epistemology but with Politics as well. • Early 1680’s,Two Treatises of Civil GovernmentLocke’s written while Whig revolutionary plots against Charles II were still in the works.

  21. Thefirst treatiseis an attack on Sir Robert Filmer and his text Patriarcha (1680), which he wrote in defense of divine monarchy. • Locke uses this critique to launch his criticism of the work of Thomas Hobbes.

  22. In theSecond TreatiseLocke states his theory of natural law and natural right,revealing a rational purpose to government. • Locke felt that the public welfare made government necessary and was the test of good government, and he always defended the government as an institution.

  23. This work is atheory of natural law andrightsin which he makes a distinction betweenlegitimate and illegitimatecivil governments and argues for the legitimacy of revolution against tyrannical governments.

  24. He saw that the reason of government established is toprotect the life, libertyand property of a people. … and if these goals are not respected, then rebellion is entirely permissible by the population who originally consented to the government's power.

  25. In 1690 Locke was also able to publishAn EssayConcerning Human Understanding, working on since 1671 (19). • In this book he establishes the principles of modern Empiricism, and attacks the rationalist concept ofinnate ideas.Drawing on earlier writings by Chillingworth in which human understanding is said to be limited, Locke sets out to determine these limits. • He writes that we can be certain that God exists, and be as certain of mortality as we are of mathematics, because we create moral and political ideas. He states that we cannot, however, know the underlying realities of natural substances, as we can only know their appearance. • He imagined that the human mind begins as a "tabula rasa," and that we learn by ourexperience.

  26. The new government of England offered Lockethe post of ambassador to Berlin or Viennain recognition of his part in the revolution, however Locke declined the honorable position.

  27. In 1689 (57), he became commissioner of appeals • In 1691(59), Locke responded to financial difficulties in the government by publishing Some Considerations of the Consequences of Lowering of Interest, and Raising the Value of Money. • In 1693 (61), he published Some Thoughts Concerning Education.

  28. and in 1695 (63) Further Considerations on the topic of money. • and from 1696 to 1700 acted as commissioner of trade and plantations.

  29. In 1695, The Reasonableness of Christianity. He was later inspired to write two Vindications of this last work in response to some criticism.

  30. Locke invested a great deal of energy in theology in his later years, and among his work published post mortem are commentaries on the Pauline epistles, • a Discourse on Miracles • a fragment of the Fourth Letter for Toleratio • and An Examination of Father Malebranche's Opinion of Seeing all things in God

  31. In his final years he lived in the country at Oates in Essex • at the home of Sir Francis and Lady Masham (Damaris Cudworth). • Locke had met Cudworth in 1682, a philosopher and daughter of the Cambridge Platonist Ralph Cudworth. • They had an intellectual and amorous relationship, which was cut short by Locke's exile in Holland.

  32. Cudworth had married Sir Francis Masham in Locke's absence, yet she and Locke remained close friends. • Before his death, Locke saw four more editions of An Essay Concerning Human Understanding

  33. … And He Rest In Peace at Oates in Essex on October 28, 1704 (72 yrs. Old).

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