HISTORY OF IDEAS: Constitutional Government In Locke's Second Treatise (Yale University)

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HISTORY OF IDEAS: Constitutional Government In Locke's Second Treatise (Yale University)
by Darius Kadivar
29-Aug-2010
 

John Locke had a profound influence on Britain's Glorious Revolution but also on Thomas Jefferson and thus deemed an honorary founding father of the United States. He advocated the natural equality of human beings, their natural rights to life, liberty, and property, and defined legitimate government in terms that Jefferson would later use in the Declaration of Independence. Locke's life and works are discussed, and the lecture shows how he transformed ideas previously formulated by Machiavelli and Hobbes into a more liberal constitutional theory of the state.

A Brief Student Intro to John Locke:

Constitutional Government: Locke's Second Treatise (A lecture by Steven Smith recorded in Fall 2006, Yale University):

Part I:


Part II:

Part III:

Two Interesting Yet debatable Criticism of Locke's Social Contract (i.e: Constitution) :

The Myth of the Social Contract :

The Social Contract: Defined and Destroyed in under 5 mins:

About John Locke:

John Locke (29 August 1632 – 28 October 1704), widely known as the Father of Liberalism, was an English philosopher and physician regarded as one of the most influential of Enlightenment thinkers. Considered one of the first of the British empiricists, following the tradition of Francis Bacon, he is equally important to social contract theory. His work had a great impact upon the development of epistemology and political philosophy. His writings influenced Voltaire and Rousseau, many Scottish Enlightenment thinkers, as well as the American revolutionaries. His contributions to classical republicanism and liberal theory are reflected in the American Declaration of Independence.

Locke's theory of mind is often cited as the origin of modern conceptions of identity and the self, figuring prominently in the work of later philosophers such as Hume, Rousseau and Kant. Locke was the first to define the self through a continuity of consciousness. He postulated that the mind was a blank slate or tabula rasa. Contrary to pre-existing Cartesian philosophy, he maintained that we are born without innate ideas, and that knowledge is instead determined only by experience derived from sense perception. More Here

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