The main ideas of John Locke (briefly). Major philosophical works
John Locke is an English political thinker, philosopher, statesman, a direct participant in the English revolution, a representative of empiricism and liberalism, an "intellectual leader of the 18th century", a supporter of constitutional monarchy and the social contract theory.
Born in the city of Rington in the west of England in a Puritan family that did not recognize the power of the Anglican Church in the country and was in opposition to the absolute monarchy of Charles I. From childhood, Locke was influenced by the political ideals of his father, a provincial lawyer who defended the sovereignty of the people.
While studying at Westminster Convent School from 1646, he was one of the best students. In 1652 he entered Oxford University, where he became close to the enthusiasts of the scientific direction, which opposed the scholastic philosophy that dominated at that time in English universities.
At Oxford, he was deeply influenced by the scientist John Wilkins, with his passion for scientific experimentation, and Richard Lowe, who pioneered blood transfusion and fascinated Locke with medicine. The university became interested in the philosophy of Descartes and Gassendi thanks to an acquaintance with Robert Boyle (1627-1691), with whom Locke conducted natural science experiments. After receiving a bachelor of arts degree in 1655 and a master's degree in 1658, he taught Greek and rhetoric to students.
He spent a year in Berlin (since 1664) as secretary to Ambassador Walter Fehn. Upon his return, he began to deal with the issue of relations between church and state, in particular the problem of religious tolerance and freedom of conscience.
Acquaintance in 1666 with Lord Anthony Ashley was a turning point in the life of John Locke. Thanks to Anthony, Locke becomes interested in politics and theology. At the request of the lord, in 1667 he wrote "An Experience on Religious Tolerance", this work reflects the concept of religious tolerance, which was then embodied in four "Letters on Religious Tolerance".
Over the next fifteen years, he actively participates in the political life of England and is under the patronage of his ally E. Ashley. Locke begins research in the field of the theory of the origin of the state, the essence of political society, its property, described in his work "Experiments on the Law of Nature" (1660-1664).
Locke's career largely depended on the rise and fall of Lord Ashley, who became Lord Shaftesbury and Grand Chancellor of England in 1672, but being the leader of the Whig party opposed to the king, his position was precarious. Therefore, in the period from 1672 to 1679. Locke received various positions in the highest government circles.
Following Shaftesbury in 1683, John Locke emigrated to Holland, realizing that it was not safe to remain in England without his patron. Soon the lord died in Amsterdam. As Locke noted, these were years of anxiety and danger. Government agents followed him and reported on his every move, in Holland he had to hide under a false name, so as not to be arrested on charges of conspiracy against England.
The "Glorious" Revolution of 1688 ended the Stuart monarchy. William of Orange was proclaimed king, significantly limiting the power of Parliament. Therefore, as a result of the ensuing denouement, Locke was able to return home to England and continue his literary and scientific activities, as well as hold various administrative posts. However, his gradually deteriorating health: constant attacks of an old disease, asthma that had tormented him for several years, forced him to ask the king for resignation.
Main compositions:
"Two treatises on state government" 1690
Essay Concerning Human Understanding 1690
"On the Reasonableness of the Christian Religion" 1695
Key Ideas:
J. Locke proclaimed the ideas of natural law, social contract, popular sovereignty, inalienable individual rights, the rule of law, rebellion against despotism and tyranny. He put the sovereignty of the people above the sovereignty of the state he created and, in the exercise of despotic power by the rulers, endowed the people with the right, according to "the original and superior to all human laws ... to appeal to heaven."
- before the emergence of the state, people were in a state of nature, that is, a state of complete freedom and equality in the management of their property and their lives, peace and goodwill, peace and security;
- state - a set of people united under the rule of law and created a judicial instance, competent to resolve conflicts between them and punish criminals;
- people, building the state, listen to the voice of reason and, measuring the exact amount of authority, transfer it to it. But they do not alienate the right to life, freedom, equality, ownership of property to anyone, since these are the natural rights of everyone from birth, which the state cannot violate;
- common law - a sign constituting the state, recognized by common consent of the people as a measure of good and evil to resolve all conflicts;
- law - not any prescription emanating from civil society or a legislature established by people, but an act of stable and long-term action, indicating to every rational being such behavior that would correspond to its own interests and serve the achievement of the common good;
- the main threat to freedom is undivided power and the concentration of absolute power in the hands of the monarch, therefore, the public authorities of the state must be delimited and divided between different bodies, divided into 3 main branches: legislative, executive and federal;
- the first place is occupied by the legislative branch of government, the form of government depends on it, the other branches must obey it;
- if the legislative power is in the hands of society, then this is a democratic form of government; if the supreme power is in the hands of a few elected persons and their descendants or successors - an oligarchy; if in the hands of one person - a monarchical form of government;
- without giving preference to any of the existing forms of government, he categorically rejected the absolute power of the monarch and preferred to speak only about the limited, constitutional, power of the monarch.
His social philosophy and theory of knowledge had a profound impact on society, and also contributed to the development of the American constitution and the formation of the modern British political system. Locke's ideas influenced such great scientists as Berkeley, Kant, Voltaire, Rousseau, Schopenhauer and other political philosophers, American revolutionaries and Scottish Enlightenment thinkers.
, Rington, Somerset, England - October 28, Essex, England) - British educator and philosopher, representative of empiricism and liberalism. Contributed to the spread of sensationalism. His ideas had a huge impact on the development of epistemology and political philosophy. He is widely recognized as one of the most influential Enlightenment thinkers and liberal theorists. Locke's letters influenced Voltaire and Rousseau, many Scottish Enlightenment thinkers, and American revolutionaries. His influence is also reflected in the American Declaration of Independence.
Locke's theoretical constructions were also noted by later philosophers such as David Hume and Immanuel Kant. Locke was the first thinker to reveal personality through the continuity of consciousness. He also postulated that the mind is a "blank slate", that is, contrary to Cartesian philosophy, Locke argued that humans are born without innate ideas, and that knowledge is instead determined only by experience gained through sense perception.
Biography
So, Locke disagrees with Descartes only in that he recognizes, instead of the innate potentialities of individual ideas, general laws that lead the mind to the discovery of certain truths, and then does not see a sharp difference between abstract and concrete ideas. If Descartes and Locke seem to speak of knowledge in a different language, then the reason for this lies not in the difference in their views, but in the difference in goals. Locke wanted to draw people's attention to experience, while Descartes was concerned with a more a priori element in human knowledge.
A noticeable, although less significant, influence on Locke's views was the psychology of Hobbes, from whom, for example, the order of presentation of the "Experience" was borrowed. Describing the processes of comparison, Locke follows Hobbes; with him, he asserts that relations do not belong to things, but are the result of comparison, that there are an innumerable number of relations, that more important relations are identity and difference, equality and inequality, similarity and dissimilarity, contiguity in space and time, cause and effect. In a treatise on language, that is, in the third book of the Essay, Locke develops the thoughts of Hobbes. In the doctrine of the will, Locke is in the strongest dependence on Hobbes; together with the latter, he teaches that the desire for pleasure is the only one that passes through our entire mental life and that the concept of good and evil is completely different for different people. In the doctrine of free will, Locke, along with Hobbes, argues that the will inclines towards the strongest desire and that freedom is a power that belongs to the soul, and not to the will.
Finally, a third influence on Locke must also be recognized, namely Newton's. So, in Locke one cannot see an independent and original thinker; with all the great merits of his book, there is a certain duality and incompleteness in it, which comes from the fact that he was influenced by such different thinkers; That is why the criticism of Locke in many cases (for example, the criticism of the idea of substance and causality) stops halfway.
The general principles of Locke's worldview boiled down to the following. The eternal, infinite, wise and good God created the world limited in space and time; the world reflects in itself the infinite properties of God and is an infinite variety. In the nature of separate objects and individuals, the greatest gradualness is noticed; from the most imperfect they pass imperceptibly to the most perfect being. All these beings are in interaction; the world is a harmonious cosmos in which each being acts according to its own nature and has its own definite purpose. The purpose of a person is the knowledge and glorification of God, and thanks to this - bliss in this and in the other world.
Much of the Essay now has only historical significance, although Locke's influence on later psychology is undeniable. Although Locke, as a political writer, often had to deal with questions of morality, he does not have a special treatise on this branch of philosophy. His thoughts about morality are distinguished by the same properties as his psychological and epistemological reflections: there is a lot of common sense, but there is no true originality and height. In a letter to Molinet (1696), Locke calls the Gospel such an excellent treatise on morality that the human mind can be excused if it does not study this kind. "Virtue" says Locke, “considered as a duty, there is nothing else than the will of God, found by natural reason; therefore it has the force of law; as for its content, it consists exclusively in the requirement to do good to oneself and others; vice, on the other hand, is nothing but the desire to harm oneself and others. The greatest vice is that which entails the most pernicious consequences; therefore, all crimes against society are much more important than crimes against a private individual. Many actions that would be quite innocent in a state of loneliness naturally turn out to be vicious in the social order.. Elsewhere Locke says that “it is human nature to seek happiness and avoid suffering”. Happiness consists in everything that pleases and satisfies the spirit, suffering - in everything that disturbs, upsets and torments the spirit. To prefer transient pleasure to lasting, permanent pleasure is to be the enemy of your own happiness.
Pedagogical ideas
He was one of the founders of the empirical-sensualistic theory of knowledge. Locke believed that a person does not have innate ideas. He is born being a "blank slate" and ready to perceive the world around him through his feelings through inner experience - reflection.
"Nine-tenths of people become what they are, only through education." The most important tasks of education: development of character, development of the will, moral discipline. The purpose of education is the education of a gentleman who knows how to conduct his affairs sensibly and prudently, an enterprising person, refined in handling. Locke saw the end goal of education as providing a healthy mind in a healthy body (“here is a brief but complete description of a happy state in this world”).
He developed a gentleman's upbringing system built on pragmatism and rationalism. The main feature of the system is utilitarianism: every item must prepare for life. Locke does not separate learning from moral and physical education. Education should consist in the formation of physical and moral habits, habits of reason and will in the educated person. The goal of physical education is to form the body into an instrument as obedient as possible to the spirit; the goal of spiritual education and training is to create a straight spirit that would act in all cases in accordance with the dignity of a rational being. Locke insists that children train themselves to self-observation, self-restraint, and self-conquest.
The upbringing of a gentleman includes (all components of upbringing must be interconnected):
- Physical education: promotes the development of a healthy body, the development of courage and perseverance. Strengthening health, fresh air, simple food, hardening, strict regimen, exercises, games.
- Mental education should be subordinated to the development of character, the formation of an educated business person.
- Religious education should be directed not to accustoming children to rituals, but to the formation of love and respect for God as the highest being.
- Moral education - to cultivate the ability to deny yourself pleasures, go against your inclinations and steadily follow the advice of reason. Development of graceful manners, skills of gallant behavior.
- Labor education consists in mastering the craft (carpentry, turning). Labor prevents the possibility of harmful idleness.
The main didactic principle is to rely on the interest and curiosity of children in teaching. The main educational means are the example and the environment. Stable positive habits are brought up by affectionate words and gentle suggestions. Physical punishment is used only in exceptional cases of daring and systematic disobedience. The development of the will occurs through the ability to endure difficulties, which is facilitated by physical exercises and hardening.
Learning content: reading, writing, drawing, geography, ethics, history, chronology, accounting, native language, French, Latin, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, swordsmanship, horseback riding, dancing, morality, the main parts of civil law, rhetoric, logic, natural philosophy, physics - that's what an educated person should know. To this must be added knowledge of some trade.
The philosophical, socio-political and pedagogical ideas of John Locke constituted a whole era in the development of pedagogical science. His thoughts were developed and enriched by the leading thinkers of France in the 18th century, and continued in the pedagogical work of Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi and the Russian enlighteners of the 18th century, who, through the mouth of M.V. Lomonosov, called him among the “wisest teachers of mankind”.
Locke pointed out the shortcomings of his contemporary pedagogical system: for example, he rebelled against the Latin speeches and poems that students were supposed to compose. Teaching should be visual, real, clear, without school terminology. But Locke is not an enemy of classical languages; he is only opposed to the system of their teaching practiced in his time. Due to some dryness inherent in Locke in general, he does not give poetry a large place in the system of education he recommends.
Some of Locke's views from Thoughts on Education were borrowed by Rousseau and brought to extreme conclusions in his Emile.
political ideas
- The state of nature is a state of complete freedom and equality in the management of one's property and one's life. It is a state of peace and goodwill. The law of nature prescribes peace and security.
- Natural law - the right to private property; the right to freedom of movement, to free labor and its results.
- Supporter of constitutional monarchy and social contract theory.
- Locke is a theorist of civil society and the rule of law democratic state (for the accountability of the king and lords to the law).
- He was the first to propose the principle of separation of powers: into legislative, executive and federal. The federal government deals with the declaration of war and peace, diplomatic matters and participation in alliances and coalitions.
- The state was created to guarantee natural rights (liberty, equality, property) and laws (peace and security), it should not encroach on these rights, it should be organized so that natural rights are reliably guaranteed.
- Developed the ideas of a democratic revolution. Locke considered it legitimate and necessary for the people to revolt against the tyrannical power that encroaches on the natural rights and freedom of the people.
He is best known for developing the principles of democratic revolution. "The right of the people to revolt against tyranny" is developed most consistently by Locke in Reflections on the Glorious Revolution of 1688, which is written with open intent "to establish the throne of the great restorer of English freedom, King William, to withdraw his rights from the will of the people and to defend the English people before the light for their new revolution."
Fundamentals of the rule of law
As a political writer, Locke is the founder of a school that seeks to build a state on the basis of individual freedom. Robert Filmer in his "Patriarch" preached the unlimitedness of royal power, deriving it from the patriarchal principle; Locke rebels against this view and bases the origin of the state on the assumption of a mutual agreement concluded with the consent of all citizens, and they, waiving the right to personally protect their property and punish violators of the law, leave it to the state. The government consists of men elected by common consent to oversee the exact observance of the laws established for the preservation of the general liberty and welfare. Upon entering the state, a person submits only to these laws, and not to the arbitrariness and whim of unlimited power. The state of despotism is worse than the state of nature, because in the latter everyone can defend his right, while before a despot he does not have this freedom. The breach of contract empowers the people to claim back their sovereign right. From these basic provisions, the internal form of the state structure is consistently derived. The state gets power
All this, however, is given to the state solely for the protection of the property of citizens. Locke considers the legislative power to be supreme, for it commands the rest. It is sacred and inviolable in the hands of those persons to whom it is handed over by society, but it is not unlimited:
Execution, on the other hand, cannot stop; therefore it is awarded to the permanent bodies. The latter, for the most part, also grants allied power ( federal government, i.e. the law of war and peace); although it essentially differs from the executive, but since both act through the same social forces, it would be inconvenient to establish different organs for them. The king is the head of the executive and union authorities. He has certain prerogatives only in order to contribute to the good of society in cases unforeseen by law.
Locke is considered the founder of the theory of constitutionalism, insofar as it is determined by the difference and separation of legislative and executive powers.
State and religion
In "Letters on toleration" and in "Reasonableness of Christianity, as delivered in the scriptures" Locke ardently preaches the idea of tolerance. He believes that the essence of Christianity lies in faith in the Messiah, which the apostles put in the forefront, demanding it with equal zeal from Christians from Jews and from Gentiles. From this, Locke concludes that one should not give exclusive preference to any one church, because all Christian confessions converge in faith in the Messiah. Muslims, Jews, pagans can be impeccably moral people, although this morality must cost them more work than believing Christians. In the strongest terms, Locke insists on the separation of church and state. The state, according to Locke, only then has the right to judge the conscience and faith of its subjects when the religious community leads to immoral and criminal acts.
In a draft written in 1688, Locke presented his ideal of a true Christian community, unhampered by any worldly relations and disputes over confessions. And here, too, he takes revelation as the foundation of religion, but makes it an indispensable duty to be tolerant of any receding opinion. The way of worship is given to the choice of everyone. An exception to the stated views Locke makes for Catholics and atheists. He did not tolerate Catholics because they have their head in Rome and therefore, as a state within a state, they are dangerous for public peace and freedom. He could not reconcile with atheists because he firmly held to the concept of revelation, which is denied by those who deny God.
Bibliography
- The same "Thoughts on Education" with correction. noticed typos and working footnotes
- Study of Father Malebranche's Opinion...1694. Notes on the books of Norris ... 1693.
- Experience of human understanding. (1689) (translation: A. N. Savina)
The most important works
- Letters of religious tolerance (A Letter Concerning Toleration) ().
- Essay Concerning Human Understanding ().
- Second treatise on civil government (The Second Treatise of Civil Government) ().
- Some thoughts on education (Some Thoughts Concerning Education) ().
- Locke became one of the founders of the "Contractual" theory of the origin of the state.
- Locke was the first to formulate the principle of "separation of powers" into legislative, executive and judicial.
- One of the key characters of the famous television series "Lost" is named after John Locke.
- Also, the surname Locke as a pseudonym was taken by one of the heroes of the series of fantasy novels by Orson Scott Card "Ender's Game". In the Russian translation, the English name " Locke' is incorrectly rendered as ' Loki».
- Also, the surname Locke is the protagonist in Michelangelo Antonioni's film "Profession: Reporter" in 1975.
Literature
- Zaichenko G. A. Objectivity of sensory knowledge: Locke, Berkeley and the problem of "secondary" qualities // Philosophical sciences. - 1985. - No. 4. - S. 98-109.
Notes
Links
- John Locke's page at the Philosophy and Atheism Library
- Locke, John at Digital Library for Philosophy
- John Locke "Second Treatise on Government" (An Essay on the True Origin, Scope, and Purpose of Civil Government)
- Solovyov E. The Locke Phenomenon
Politics and the state | |
---|---|
Scientific disciplines and theories | Political Science Comparative Political Science Theory of State and Law Public Choice Theory |
General principles and concepts | Civil society Rule of law Human rights Separation of powers Revolution Types of state Sovereignty |
states by political strength and influence |
Great Power Colony Puppet State Satellite Superpower |
Policies | Geopolitics Domestic policy Foreign policy |
Form of government | Confederation Unitary State Federation |
Socio-political institutions and branches of government |
Banking system Supreme power Legislative power Electoral system Executive power Mass media Judicial power |
State machine and authorities |
Head of State Parliament Government |
Political regime | Anarchy Authoritarianism Democracy Despotism Totalitarianism |
Form of government and political system |
Military Dictatorship Dictatorship Monarchy Plutocracy Parliamentary Republic Republic Theocracy Timocracy Autocracy |
So, Locke disagrees with Descartes only in that he recognizes, instead of the innate potentialities of individual ideas, general laws that lead the mind to the discovery of certain truths, and then does not see a sharp difference between abstract and concrete ideas. If Descartes and Locke seem to speak of knowledge in a different language, then the reason for this lies not in the difference in their views, but in the difference in goals. Locke wanted to draw people's attention to experience, while Descartes was concerned with a more a priori element in human knowledge.
A noticeable, although less significant, influence on Locke's views was the psychology of Hobbes, from whom, for example, the order of presentation of the "Experience" was borrowed. Describing the processes of comparison, Locke follows Hobbes; with him, he asserts that relations do not belong to things, but are the result of comparison, that there are an innumerable number of relations, that more important relations are identity and difference, equality and inequality, similarity and dissimilarity, contiguity in space and time, cause and effect. In a treatise on language, that is, in the third book of the Essay, Locke develops the thoughts of Hobbes. In the doctrine of the will, Locke is in the strongest dependence on Hobbes; together with the latter, he teaches that the desire for pleasure is the only one that passes through our entire mental life and that the concept of good and evil is completely different for different people. In the doctrine of free will, Locke, along with Hobbes, argues that the will inclines towards the strongest desire and that freedom is a power that belongs to the soul, and not to the will.
Finally, a third influence on Locke must also be recognized, namely Newton's. So, in Locke one cannot see an independent and original thinker; with all the great merits of his book, there is a certain duality and incompleteness in it, which comes from the fact that he was influenced by such different thinkers; That is why the criticism of Locke in many cases (for example, the criticism of the idea of substance and causality) stops halfway.
The general principles of Locke's worldview boiled down to the following. The eternal, infinite, wise and good God created the world limited in space and time; the world reflects in itself the infinite properties of God and is an infinite variety. In the nature of separate objects and individuals, the greatest gradualness is noticed; from the most imperfect they pass imperceptibly to the most perfect being. All these beings are in interaction; the world is a harmonious cosmos in which every being acts according to its own nature and has its definite purpose. The purpose of a person is the knowledge and glorification of God, and thanks to this - bliss in this and in the other world.
Much of the Essay now has only historical significance, although Locke's influence on later psychology is undeniable. Although Locke, as a political writer, often had to deal with questions of morality, he does not have a special treatise on this branch of philosophy. His thoughts about morality are distinguished by the same properties as his psychological and epistemological reflections: there is a lot of common sense, but there is no true originality and height. In a letter to Molinet (1696), Locke calls the Gospel such an excellent treatise on morality that the human mind can be excused if it does not study this kind. "Virtue" says Locke, “considered as a duty, there is nothing else than the will of God, found by natural reason; therefore it has the force of law; as for its content, it consists exclusively in the requirement to do good to oneself and others; vice, on the other hand, is nothing but the desire to harm oneself and others. The greatest vice is that which entails the most pernicious consequences; therefore, all crimes against society are much more important than crimes against a private individual. Many actions that would be quite innocent in a state of loneliness naturally turn out to be vicious in the social order.. Elsewhere Locke says that “it is human nature to seek happiness and avoid suffering”. Happiness consists in everything that pleases and satisfies the spirit, suffering - in everything that disturbs, upsets and torments the spirit. To prefer transient pleasure to lasting, permanent pleasure is to be the enemy of your own happiness.
Pedagogical ideas
He was one of the founders of the empirical-sensualistic theory of knowledge. Locke believed that a person does not have innate ideas. He is born being a “clean board” and ready to perceive the world around him through his feelings through inner experience - reflection.
"Nine-tenths of people become what they are, only through education." The most important tasks of education: development of character, development of the will, moral discipline. The purpose of education is the education of a gentleman who knows how to conduct his affairs sensibly and prudently, an enterprising person, refined in handling. Locke saw the end goal of education as providing a healthy mind in a healthy body (“here is a brief but complete description of a happy state in this world”).
He developed a gentleman's upbringing system built on pragmatism and rationalism. The main feature of the system is utilitarianism: every item must prepare for life. Locke does not separate learning from moral and physical education. Education should consist in the formation of physical and moral habits, habits of reason and will in the educated person. The goal of physical education is to form the body into an instrument as obedient as possible to the spirit; the goal of spiritual education and training is to create a straight spirit that would act in all cases in accordance with the dignity of a rational being. Locke insists that children train themselves to self-observation, self-restraint, and self-conquest.
The upbringing of a gentleman includes (all components of upbringing must be interconnected):
- Physical education: promotes the development of a healthy body, the development of courage and perseverance. Strengthening health, fresh air, simple food, hardening, strict regimen, exercises, games.
- Mental education should be subordinated to the development of character, the formation of an educated business person.
- Religious education should be directed not to accustoming children to rituals, but to the formation of love and respect for God as the highest being.
- Moral education - to cultivate the ability to deny yourself pleasures, go against your inclinations and steadily follow the advice of reason. Development of graceful manners, skills of gallant behavior.
- Labor education consists in mastering the craft (carpentry, turning). Labor prevents the possibility of harmful idleness.
The main didactic principle is to rely on the interest and curiosity of children in teaching. The main educational means are the example and the environment. Stable positive habits are brought up by affectionate words and gentle suggestions. Physical punishment is used only in exceptional cases of daring and systematic disobedience. The development of the will occurs through the ability to endure difficulties, which is facilitated by physical exercises and hardening.
Learning content: reading, writing, drawing, geography, ethics, history, chronology, accounting, native language, French, Latin, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, fencing, horseback riding, dancing, morality, the main parts of civil law, rhetoric, logic, natural philosophy, physics - that's what an educated person should know. To this must be added knowledge of some trade.
The philosophical, socio-political and pedagogical ideas of John Locke constituted a whole era in the development of pedagogical science. His thoughts were developed and enriched by the leading thinkers of France in the 18th century, and continued in the pedagogical activity of Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi and Russian enlighteners of the 18th century, who through the mouth of M.V. Lomonosov called him among the “wisest teachers of mankind”.
Locke pointed out the shortcomings of his contemporary pedagogical system: for example, he rebelled against the Latin speeches and poems that students were supposed to compose. Teaching should be visual, real, clear, without school terminology. But Locke is not an enemy of classical languages; he is only opposed to the system of their teaching practiced in his time. Due to some dryness inherent in Locke in general, he does not give poetry a large place in the system of education he recommends.
Some of Locke's views from Thoughts on Education were borrowed by Rousseau and brought to extreme conclusions in his Emile.
political ideas
He is best known for developing the principles of democratic revolution. "The right of the people to rebel against tyranny" is most consistently developed by Locke in Reflections on the Glorious Revolution of 1688, which is written with openly expressed intent "to establish the throne of the great restorer of English freedom, King William, to withdraw his rights from the will of the people and to defend the English people before the light for their new revolution."
Fundamentals of the rule of law
As a political writer, Locke is the founder of a school that seeks to build a state on the basis of individual freedom. Robert Filmer in his "Patriarch" preached the unlimitedness of royal power, deriving it from the patriarchal principle; Locke rebels against this view and bases the origin of the state on the assumption of a mutual agreement concluded with the consent of all citizens, and they, waiving the right to personally protect their property and punish violators of the law, leave it to the state. The government consists of men elected by common consent to oversee the exact observance of the laws established for the preservation of the general liberty and welfare. Upon entering the state, a person submits only to these laws, and not to the arbitrariness and whim of unlimited power. The state of despotism is worse than the state of nature, because in the latter everyone can defend his right, while before a despot he does not have this freedom. The breach of the treaty empowers the people to claim back their supreme right. From these basic provisions, the internal form of the state structure is consistently derived. The state gets power
All this, however, is given to the state solely for the protection of the property of citizens. Locke considers the legislative power to be supreme, for it commands the rest. It is sacred and inviolable in the hands of those persons to whom it is handed over by society, but it is not unlimited:
Execution, on the other hand, cannot stop; therefore it is awarded to the permanent bodies. The latter, for the most part, also grants allied power ( federal government, i.e. the law of war and peace); although it essentially differs from the executive, but since both act through the same social forces, it would be inconvenient to establish different organs for them. The king is the head of the executive and union authorities. He has certain prerogatives only in order to contribute to the good of society in cases unforeseen by law.
Locke is considered the founder of the theory of constitutionalism, insofar as it is determined by the difference and separation of legislative and executive powers.
State and religion
In "Letters on toleration" and in "Reasonableness of Christianity, as delivered in the scriptures" Locke ardently preaches the idea of tolerance. He believes that the essence of Christianity lies in faith in the Messiah, which the apostles put in the forefront, demanding it with equal zeal from Christians from Jews and from Gentiles. From this, Locke concludes that one should not give exclusive preference to any one church, because all Christian confessions converge in faith in the Messiah. Muslims, Jews, pagans can be impeccably moral people, although this morality must cost them more work than believing Christians. In the strongest terms, Locke insists on the separation of the church from the state. The state, according to Locke, only then has the right to judge the conscience and faith of its subjects when the religious community leads to immoral and criminal acts.
In a draft written in 1688, Locke presented his ideal of a true Christian community, unhampered by any worldly relations and disputes over confessions. And here, too, he takes revelation as the foundation of religion, but makes it an indispensable duty to be tolerant of any receding opinion. The way of worship is given to the choice of everyone. An exception to the stated views Locke makes for Catholics and atheists. He did not tolerate Catholics because they have their head in Rome and therefore, as a state within a state, they are dangerous for public peace and freedom. He could not reconcile himself with atheists because he firmly held on to the concept of revelation, which is denied by those who deny God.
John Locke- an English philosopher, an outstanding thinker of the Enlightenment, a teacher, theorist of liberalism, a representative of empiricism, a person whose ideas largely influenced the development of political philosophy, epistemology, had a certain impact on the formation of the views of Voltaire and other philosophers, American revolutionaries.
Locke was born in western England, near Bristol, in the small town of Wrington on August 29, 1632, in the family of a lawyer official. Puritan parents raised their son in an atmosphere of strict observance of religious rules. The recommendation of an influential acquaintance of his father helped Locke in 1646 to get into Westminster School - the most prestigious school in the country at that time, where he was one of the best students. In 1652, John continued his education at Christ Church College, Oxford University, where he received a bachelor's degree in 1656, and three more years later, a master's degree. His talent and diligence were rewarded with an offer to stay at an educational institution and teach philosophy, the ancient Greek language. During these years, his more Aristotelian philosophy became interested in medicine, the study of which he devoted a lot of effort. However, he failed to obtain the coveted degree of Doctor of Medicine.
John Locke was 34 years old when fate brought him to a man who greatly influenced his entire future biography - Lord Ashley, later Earl of Shaftesbury. First, Locke was with him in 1667 as a family doctor and tutor to his son, and later served as a secretary, and this prompted him to enter politics himself. Shaftesbury gave him great support, introducing him into political and economic circles, giving him the opportunity to take part in public administration himself. In 1668, Locke became a member of the Royal Society of London, and the following year he was a member of its Council. He does not forget about other types of activity: for example, in 1671 he had an idea for a work to which he would devote 16 years and which would become the main one in his philosophical heritage - “An Experiment on Human Understanding”, dedicated to the study of the cognitive potential of man.
In 1672 and 1679, Locke served in the highest government institutions in prestigious positions, but at the same time, his advancement in the world of politics was in direct proportion to what progress his patron made. Health problems forced J. Locke to spend the period in France from the end of 1675 to the middle of 1679. In 1683, following the Earl of Shaftesbury and fearing political persecution, he moved to Holland. There he strikes up a friendly relationship with William of Orange; Locke has a noticeable ideological influence on him and becomes a participant in the preparation of the coup, as a result of which William becomes the king of England.
Changes allow Locke to return in 1689 to England. Since 1691, Ots, the Mesham estate, which belonged to his friend, the wife of a member of parliament, became his place of residence: he accepted her invitation to settle in a country house, because. suffered from asthma for many years. During these years, Locke is not only in the government service, but also takes part in the upbringing of Lady Mesham's son, devotes a lot of energy to literature and science, finishes the "Experiment on the Human Mind", prepares for publication previously conceived works, including "Two treatises on government ”, “Thoughts about education”, “The reasonableness of Christianity”. In 1700, Locke decides to resign from all his positions; October 28, 1704 he died.
Biography from Wikipedia
He was born on August 29, 1632 in the small town of Wrington in the west of England, in the county of Somerset, near Bristol, in the family of a provincial lawyer.
In 1646, on the recommendation of his father's commander (who during the civil war was a captain in Cromwell's parliamentary army), he was enrolled in Westminster School (the country's leading educational institution, at that time) In 1652, Locke, one of the best students of the school, entered Oxford University . In 1656 he received a bachelor's degree, and in 1658 - a master's degree from this university.
In 1667, Locke accepted the offer of Lord Ashley (later Earl of Shaftesbury) to take the place of his son's family doctor and tutor, and then actively involved in political activities. Starts writing the Epistles on Toleration (published: 1st - in 1689, 2nd and 3rd - in 1692 (these three are anonymous), 4th - in 1706, after Locke's death) .
On behalf of the Earl of Shaftesbury, Locke participated in the drafting of a constitution for the province of Carolina in North America ("Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina").
1668 - Locke is elected a member of the Royal Society, and in 1669 - a member of its Council. Locke's main areas of interest were natural science, medicine, politics, economics, pedagogy, the relationship of the state to the church, the problem of religious tolerance and freedom of conscience.
1671 - decides to carry out a thorough study of the cognitive abilities of the human mind. This was the idea of the main work of the scientist - "Experiment on human understanding", on which he worked for 19 years.
1672 and 1679 - Locke receives various prominent positions in the highest government institutions in England. But Locke's career was directly affected by the ups and downs of Shaftesbury. From the end of 1675 until the middle of 1679, due to deteriorating health, Locke was in France.
In 1683, Locke emigrated to Holland following Shaftesbury. In 1688-1689, a denouement came that put an end to Locke's wanderings. The Glorious Revolution took place, William III of Orange was proclaimed King of England. In 1688, Locke returned to his homeland.
In the 1690s, along with the government service, Locke again leads a wide scientific and literary activity. In 1690, "An Essay on Human Understanding", "Two Treatises on Government" were published, in 1693 - "Thoughts on Education", in 1695 - "The Reasonableness of Christianity".
Theory of knowledge
The basis of our knowledge is experience, which consists of individual perceptions. Perceptions are divided into sensations (the action of an object on our sense organs) and reflections. Ideas arise in the mind as a result of the abstraction of perceptions. The principle of building the mind as "tabula rasa", which gradually reflects information from the senses. The principle of empiricism: the primacy of sensation over reason.
Locke's philosophy was extremely strongly influenced by Descartes; Descartes' doctrine of knowledge underlies all of Locke's epistemological views. Reliable knowledge, taught Descartes, consists in the discernment by reason of clear and obvious relations between clear and separate ideas; where reason, by comparing ideas, does not see such relations, there can only be opinion, and not knowledge; certain truths are obtained by the mind directly or through inference from other truths, why knowledge is intuitive and deductive; deduction is accomplished not by syllogism, but by bringing the compared ideas to a point whereby the relation between them becomes evident; deductive knowledge, which is composed of intuition, is quite reliable, but since it also depends in some respects on memory, it is less reliable than intuitive knowledge. In all this Locke fully agrees with Descartes; he accepts the Cartesian proposition that the most certain truth is the intuitive truth of our own existence.
In the doctrine of substance, Locke agrees with Descartes that the phenomenon is unthinkable without substance, that substance is found in signs, and is not known in itself; he objects only to Descartes' proposition that the soul constantly thinks, that thinking is the main feature of the soul. While agreeing with the Cartesian doctrine of the origin of truths, Locke disagrees with Descartes on the issue of the origin of ideas. According to Locke, developed in detail in the second book of the Experience, all complex ideas are gradually developed by the mind from simple ideas, and simple ones come from external or internal experience. In the first book of the Experience, Locke explains in detail and critically why no other source of ideas can be assumed than external and internal experience. Having enumerated the signs by which ideas are recognized as innate, he shows that these signs do not at all prove innateness. For example, universal recognition does not prove innateness, if one can point to another explanation for the fact of universal recognition, and even the very universal recognition of a known principle is doubtful. Even if we assume that some principles are discovered by our mind, this does not at all prove their innateness. Locke does not at all deny, however, that our cognitive activity is determined by certain laws inherent in the human spirit. He recognizes, together with Descartes, two elements of knowledge - innate beginnings and external data; the former are reason and will. Reason is the faculty by which we receive and form ideas, both simple and complex, and also the faculty of perceiving certain relations between ideas.
So, Locke disagrees with Descartes only in that he recognizes, instead of the innate potentialities of individual ideas, general laws that lead the mind to the discovery of certain truths, and then does not see a sharp difference between abstract and concrete ideas. If Descartes and Locke seem to speak of knowledge in a different language, then the reason for this lies not in the difference in their views, but in the difference in goals. Locke wanted to draw people's attention to experience, while Descartes was concerned with a more a priori element in human knowledge.
A noticeable, although less significant, influence on Locke's views was the psychology of Hobbes, from whom, for example, the order of presentation of the "Experience" was borrowed. Describing the processes of comparison, Locke follows Hobbes; with him, he asserts that relations do not belong to things, but are the result of comparison, that there are an innumerable number of relations, that more important relations are identity and difference, equality and inequality, similarity and dissimilarity, contiguity in space and time, cause and effect. In a treatise on language, that is, in the third book of the Essay, Locke develops the thoughts of Hobbes. In the doctrine of the will, Locke is in the strongest dependence on Hobbes; together with the latter, he teaches that the desire for pleasure is the only one that passes through our entire mental life and that the concept of good and evil is completely different for different people. In the doctrine of free will, Locke, along with Hobbes, argues that the will inclines towards the strongest desire and that freedom is a power that belongs to the soul, and not to the will.
Finally, a third influence on Locke must also be recognized, namely Newton's. So, in Locke one cannot see an independent and original thinker; with all the great merits of his book, there is a certain duality and incompleteness in it, which comes from the fact that he was influenced by such different thinkers; That is why the criticism of Locke in many cases (for example, the criticism of the idea of substance and causality) stops halfway.
The general principles of Locke's worldview boiled down to the following. The eternal, infinite, wise and good God created the world limited in space and time; the world reflects in itself the infinite properties of God and is an infinite variety. In the nature of separate objects and individuals, the greatest gradualness is noticed; from the most imperfect they pass imperceptibly to the most perfect being. All these beings are in interaction; the world is a harmonious cosmos in which every being acts according to its own nature and has its definite purpose. The purpose of man is the knowledge and glorification of God, and thanks to this - bliss in this and in the other world.
Much of the Essay now has only historical significance, although Locke's influence on later psychology is undeniable. Although Locke, as a political writer, often had to deal with questions of morality, he does not have a special treatise on this branch of philosophy. His thoughts about morality are distinguished by the same properties as his psychological and epistemological reflections: there is a lot of common sense, but there is no true originality and height. In a letter to Molinet (1696), Locke calls the Gospel such an excellent treatise on morality that one can excuse the human mind if it does not engage in research of this kind. "Virtue" says Locke, “considered as a duty, there is nothing else than the will of God, found by natural reason; therefore it has the force of law; as for its content, it consists exclusively in the requirement to do good to oneself and others; vice, on the other hand, is nothing but the desire to harm oneself and others. The greatest vice is that which entails the most pernicious consequences; therefore, all crimes against society are much more important than crimes against a private individual. Many actions that would be quite innocent in a state of loneliness naturally turn out to be vicious in the social order.. Elsewhere Locke says that “it is human nature to seek happiness and avoid suffering”. Happiness consists in everything that pleases and satisfies the spirit, suffering - in everything that disturbs, upsets and torments the spirit. To prefer transient pleasure to lasting, permanent pleasure is to be an enemy of your own happiness.
Pedagogical ideas
He was one of the founders of the empirical-sensualistic theory of knowledge. Locke believed that a person does not have innate ideas. He is born being a "blank slate" and ready to perceive the world around him through his feelings through inner experience - reflection.
"Nine-tenths of people become what they are, only through education." The most important tasks of education: development of character, development of the will, moral discipline. The purpose of education is the education of a gentleman who knows how to conduct his affairs sensibly and prudently, an enterprising person, refined in handling. Locke's ultimate goal of education was to provide a healthy mind in a healthy body ("here is a brief but complete description of a happy state in this world").
He developed a gentleman's upbringing system built on pragmatism and rationalism. The main feature of the system is utilitarianism: every item must prepare for life. Locke does not separate learning from moral and physical education. Education should consist in the formation of physical and moral habits, habits of reason and will in the educated person. The goal of physical education is to form the body into an instrument as obedient as possible to the spirit; the goal of spiritual education and training is to create a straight spirit that would act in all cases in accordance with the dignity of a rational being. Locke insists that children teach themselves self-observation, self-restraint, and self-conquest.
The upbringing of a gentleman includes (all components of upbringing must be interconnected):
- Physical education: promotes the development of a healthy body, the development of courage and perseverance. Strengthening health, fresh air, simple food, hardening, strict regimen, exercises, games.
- Mental education should be subordinated to the development of character, the formation of an educated business person.
- Religious education should be directed not to accustoming children to rituals, but to the formation of love and respect for God as the highest being.
- Moral education - to cultivate the ability to deny yourself pleasures, go against your inclinations and steadily follow the advice of reason. Development of graceful manners, skills of gallant behavior.
- Labor education consists in mastering the craft (carpentry, turning). Labor prevents the possibility of harmful idleness.
The main didactic principle is to rely on the interest and curiosity of children in teaching. The main educational means are the example and the environment. Stable positive habits are brought up by affectionate words and gentle suggestions. Physical punishment is used only in exceptional cases of daring and systematic disobedience. The development of the will occurs through the ability to endure difficulties, which is facilitated by physical exercises and hardening.
Learning content: reading, writing, drawing, geography, ethics, history, chronology, accounting, native language, French, Latin, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, fencing, horseback riding, dancing, morality, the main parts of civil law, rhetoric, logic, natural philosophy, physics - that's what an educated person should know. To this must be added knowledge of some craft.
The philosophical, socio-political and pedagogical ideas of John Locke constituted a whole era in the development of pedagogical science. His thoughts were developed and enriched by the leading thinkers of France of the 18th century, found continuation in the pedagogical activity of Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi and Russian enlighteners of the 18th century, who, through the mouth of M.V. Lomonosov, called him among the “wisest teachers of mankind”.
Locke pointed out the shortcomings of his contemporary pedagogical system: for example, he rebelled against the Latin speeches and poems that students were supposed to compose. Teaching should be visual, real, clear, without school terminology. But Locke is not an enemy of classical languages; he is only opposed to the system of their teaching practiced in his time. Due to some dryness inherent in Locke in general, he does not give poetry a large place in the system of education he recommends.
Some of Locke's views from Thoughts on Education were borrowed by Rousseau and brought to extreme conclusions in his Emile.
political ideas
- The state of nature is a state of complete freedom and equality in the management of one's property and one's life. It is a state of peace and goodwill. The law of nature prescribes peace and security.
- The right to property is a natural right; at the same time, Locke understood property as life, liberty, and property, including intellectual property. Liberty, according to Locke, is the freedom of a person to dispose and dispose, as he pleases, of his person, his actions ... and all his property. By freedom, he understood, in particular, the right to freedom of movement, to free labor and its results.
- Freedom, Locke explains, exists where everyone is recognized as "the owner of his own personality." The right to freedom, therefore, means that which was only implied in the right to life, was present as its deepest content. The right of freedom denies any relation of personal dependence (the relation of a slave and a slave owner, a serf and a landowner, a serf and a master, a patron and a client). If the right to life according to Locke forbade slavery as an economic relation, even biblical slavery he interpreted only as the right of the owner to entrust the slave with hard work, and not the right to life and freedom, then the right to freedom, ultimately, means the denial of political slavery, or despotism. We are talking about the fact that in a reasonable society no person can be a slave, vassal or servant not only of the head of state, but also of the state itself or private, state, even own property (that is, property in the modern sense, which differs from the understanding of Locke ). Man can serve only law and justice.
- Supporter of constitutional monarchy and social contract theory.
- Locke is a theorist of civil society and the rule of law democratic state (for the accountability of the king and lords to the law).
- He was the first to propose the principle of separation of powers: into legislative, executive and federal. The federal government deals with the declaration of war and peace, diplomatic matters and participation in alliances and coalitions.
- The state was created to guarantee natural law (life, liberty, property) and laws (peace and security), it should not encroach on natural law and law, it must be organized so that natural law is reliably guaranteed.
- Developed the ideas of a democratic revolution. Locke considered it legitimate and necessary for the people to revolt against the tyrannical power that encroaches on the natural rights and freedom of the people.
- Despite this, Locke was one of the largest investors in the British slave trade of his time. He also gave a philosophical justification for the taking of land by the colonists from the North American Indians. His views on economic slavery in modern scientific literature are regarded either as an organic continuation of Locke's anthropology, or as evidence of its inconsistency.
He is best known for developing the principles of democratic revolution. "The right of the people to revolt against tyranny" is most consistently developed by Locke in Reflections on the Glorious Revolution of 1688, which is written with the open intention of "to establish the throne of the great restorer of English freedom, King William, to withdraw his rights from the will of the people and to defend the English people before the light for their new revolution."
Fundamentals of the rule of law
As a political writer, Locke is the founder of a school that seeks to build a state on the basis of individual freedom. Robert Filmer in his "Patriarch" preached the unlimitedness of royal power, deriving it from the patriarchal principle; Locke rebels against this view and bases the origin of the state on the assumption of a mutual contract concluded with the consent of all citizens, and they, waiving the right to personally protect their property and punish violators of the law, leave this to the state. The government consists of men elected by common consent to oversee the exact observance of the laws established for the preservation of the general liberty and welfare. Upon entering the state, a person is subject only to these laws, and not to the arbitrariness and whim of unlimited power. The state of despotism is worse than the state of nature, because in the latter everyone can defend his right, while before a despot he does not have this freedom. The breach of the treaty empowers the people to claim back their supreme right. From these basic provisions, the internal form of the state structure is consistently derived. The state gets power
- To issue laws that determine the amount of punishments for various crimes, that is, the power of the legislature;
- Punish crimes committed by members of the union, that is, executive power;
- To punish the offenses inflicted on the union by external enemies, that is, the right of war and peace.
All this, however, is given to the state solely for the protection of the property of citizens. Locke considers the legislative power to be supreme, for it commands the rest. It is sacred and inviolable in the hands of those persons to whom it is handed over by society, but it is not unlimited:
- It has no absolute, arbitrary power over the life and property of citizens. This follows from the fact that it is vested only with those rights which are transferred to it by each member of society, and in the state of nature no one has arbitrary power either over his own life or over the life and property of others. Human rights are limited to what is necessary for the protection of oneself and others; no one can give more to the state power.
- The legislator cannot act by private and arbitrary decisions; he must govern solely on the basis of permanent laws, for all the same. Arbitrary power is completely incompatible with the essence of civil society, not only in a monarchy, but also under any other form of government.
- The supreme power has no right to take from anyone a part of his property without his consent, since people unite in societies to protect property, and the latter would be in a worse condition than before if the government could dispose of it arbitrarily. Therefore, the government has no right to collect taxes without the consent of the majority of the people or their representatives.
- The legislator cannot transfer his power into the wrong hands; this right belongs to the people alone. Since legislation does not require constant activity, in well-organized states it is entrusted to an assembly of persons who, converging, legislate and then, dispersing, obey their own decrees.
Execution, on the other hand, cannot stop; therefore it is awarded to the permanent bodies. The latter, for the most part, also grants allied power ( federal government, i.e. the law of war and peace); although it essentially differs from the executive, but since both act through the same social forces, it would be inconvenient to establish different organs for them. The king is the head of the executive and union authorities. He has certain prerogatives only in order to contribute to the good of society in cases unforeseen by law.
Locke is considered the founder of the theory of constitutionalism, insofar as it is determined by the difference and separation of legislative and executive powers.
State and religion
In Letters on Toleration and in The Reasonableness of Christianity as Represented in the Holy Scriptures, Locke ardently preaches the idea of tolerance. He believes that the essence of Christianity lies in faith in the Messiah, which the apostles put in the forefront, demanding it with equal zeal from Christians from Jews and from Gentiles. From this, Locke concludes that one should not give exclusive preference to any one church, because all Christian confessions converge in faith in the Messiah. Muslims, Jews, pagans can be impeccably moral people, although this morality must cost them more work than believing Christians. In the strongest terms, Locke insists on the separation of church and state. The state, according to Locke, only then has the right to judge the conscience and faith of its subjects when the religious community leads to immoral and criminal acts.
In a draft written in 1688, Locke presented his ideal of a true Christian community, unhampered by any worldly relations and disputes over confessions. And here, too, he takes revelation as the foundation of religion, but makes it an indispensable duty to be tolerant of any receding opinion. The way of worship is given to the choice of everyone. Locke makes an exception from the stated views for Catholics and atheists. He did not tolerate Catholics because they have their head in Rome and therefore, as a state within a state, they are dangerous for public peace and freedom. He could not reconcile with atheists because he firmly held to the concept of revelation, which is denied by those who deny God.
Bibliography
- Thoughts on education. 1691…what a gentleman should learn. 1703.
- The same "Thoughts on Education" with correction. noticed typos and working footnotes
- Study of Father Malebranche's Opinion...1694. Notes on the books of Norris ... 1693.
- Letters. 1697-1699.
- The dying speech of the censor. 1664.
- Experiments on the law of nature. 1664.
- The experience of tolerance. 1667.
- The message of tolerance. 1686.
- Two Treatises on Government. 1689.
- Experience of human understanding. (1689) (translation: A. N. Savina)
- Elements of natural philosophy. 1698.
- Discourse on miracles. 1701.
The most important works
- Letters on religious tolerance (A Letter Concerning Toleration, 1689).
- Essay Concerning Human Understanding, 1690.
- Second treatise on civil government (The Second Treatise of Civil Government, 1690).
- Some Thoughts on Education (Some Thoughts Concerning Education, 1693).
- The reasonableness of Christianity, as delivered in the Scriptures, 1695
- One of the key characters of the cult television series "Lost" is named after John Locke.
- Also, the surname Locke as a pseudonym was taken by one of the heroes of the series of fantasy novels by Orson Scott Card "Ender's Game". In the Russian translation, the English name " Locke' is incorrectly rendered as ' Loki».
- Also, the surname Locke is the protagonist in Michelangelo Antonioni's film "Profession: Reporter" in 1975.
- Locke's pedagogical ideas influenced the spiritual life of Russia in the middle of the 18th century.
Locke John (1632-1704)
English philosopher. Born into the family of a small landowner. He graduated from Westminster School and Oxford University, where he later taught. In 1668 he was elected to the Royal Society of London, and a year earlier he became a family doctor, and then the personal secretary of Lord Ashley (Earl of Shaftesbury), thanks to which he joined an active political life.
Locke's interests, in addition to philosophy, manifested themselves in medicine, experimental chemistry and meteorology. In 1683 he was forced to emigrate to Holland, where he became close to the circle of William of Orange and after his proclamation as King of England in 1689 he returned to his homeland.
The theory of knowledge is central to Locke. He criticizes Cartesianism and university scholastic philosophy. He presented his main views in this area in the work "Experiments on the Human Mind". In it, he denies the existence of "innate ideas", and recognizes exclusively external experience, which is formed from sensations, and internal, formed through reflection, as the source for all knowledge. This is the famous "blank slate" teaching, tabula rasa.
The foundation of knowledge is formed by simple ideas, excited in the mind by the primary qualities of bodies (extension, density, movement) and secondary (color, sound, smell). From the combination, comparison and abstraction of simple ideas, complex ideas (modes, substances, relations) are formed. The criterion of the truth of ideas is their clarity and distinctness. Knowledge itself is divided into intuitive, demonstrative and sensitive.
Locke considers the state as the result of mutual agreement, but highlights not so much legal as moral criteria of people's behavior, understanding as the main condition for a prosperous state "the power of morality and morality." Moral standards are the foundation on which human relationships are built. This is facilitated by the fact that the natural inclinations of people are directed precisely in the direction of good.
Locke's socio-political views are expressed in "Two treatises on state government", the first of which is devoted to criticism of the divine foundation of absolute royal power, and the second to the development of the theory of constitutional parliamentary monarchy.
Locke does not recognize the absolute monistic power of the state, proving the need for its division into legislative, executive and "federal" (dealing with the external relations of the state) and allowing the right of the people to overthrow the government.
In religious matters, Locke stands on the positions of religious tolerance, which is the basis of religious freedom. Although he recognizes the necessity of divine revelation because of the finitude of the human mind, he also has a tendency to deism, which declares itself in the treatise "The Reasonableness of Christianity".