The Locke Reader: Selections from the Works of John Locke with a General Introduction and CommentaryCUP Archive, 1977 M03 1 - 350 páginas John Yolton seeks to allow readers of Locke to have accessible in one volume sections from a wide range of Locke's books, structured so that some of the interconnections of his thought can be seen and traced. Although Locke did not write from a system of philosophy, he did have in mind an overall division of human knowledge. The readings begin with Locke's essay on Hermeneutics and the portions of his Essay Concerning Human Understanding on how to read a text. The reset of the selections are organized around Locke's division of human knowledge into natural science, ethics, and the theory of signs. Yolton's introduction and commentary explicate Locke's doctrines and provide the reader with the general background knowledge of other seventeenth-century writers and their works necessary to an understanding of Locke and his time. |
Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
Essay 3 9 3 | 3 |
Essay 4 21 15 28 | 4 |
The Science of Nature | 31 |
Deductive Knowledge and Real Essence | 54 |
Essay 4 6 916 | 78 |
Observational Knowledge of Nature | 85 |
Essay 3 11 1921 | 86 |
Essay 3 11 56 | 152 |
Essay 4 8 7 13 | 153 |
c Defects of Language and Their Remedies | 154 |
Essay 3 10 16 9 12 235 | 156 |
Essay 3 11 16 1112 | 160 |
Conduct section 29 | 163 |
Moral Words | 164 |
Essay 3 10 33 | 165 |
Essay 3 11 25 | 87 |
Essay 4 12 9 | 89 |
Essay 4 12 12 | 90 |
Essay 4 12 2 | 91 |
Hypotheses in Science | 92 |
Conduct section 13 | 93 |
Conduct section 25 | 94 |
Conduct sections 434 | 95 |
Conduct sections 345 | 96 |
Essay 4 16 12 98 | 98 |
Letter to Molyneux Works IX pp 4635 | 100 |
Essay 2 8 12 723 | 102 |
The Doctrine of Signs | 109 |
Examination sections 35 1718 42 | 111 |
Examination section 20 | 116 |
Essay 1 3 14 1011 120 | 120 |
Essay 1 4 | 123 |
b Genetic Account of Ideas in Children | 126 |
Essay 2 1 6 212 127 | 127 |
Essay 2 9 5 7 | 128 |
c Experience as the Source 129 | 129 |
Essay 1 4 25 | 130 |
d Physiology | 132 |
Essay 2 8 4 136 | 136 |
Essay 2 10 5 | 137 |
e Specific Ideas 138 | 138 |
Essay 2 4 13 | 140 |
Essay 2 16 12 | 142 |
Essay 2 21 1 | 143 |
Letter to the Bishop of Worcester Works IV p 11 | 144 |
Word Signs | 145 |
Essay 3 3 6 11 | 148 |
Essay 4 5 4 | 149 |
Essay 4 6 1 | 150 |
Essay 3 10 26 | 151 |
Conduct section 9 | 167 |
The Science of Action | 169 |
Character Traits and Natural Tendencies | 170 |
Education sections 66 1012 | 171 |
Conduct sections 2 4 | 173 |
Action and the Person | 176 |
Essay 3 5 1011 | 177 |
Essay 3 9 7 | 178 |
Essay 2 27 36 | 180 |
Essay 2 27 9 1617 26 | 182 |
Essay 2 27 15 | 185 |
Virtue and Law | 190 |
Essay 2 28 416 | 195 |
Essay 2 21 60 | 201 |
vii | 202 |
Reasonableness Works VII pp 11123 | 206 |
Reasonableness Works VII pp 13844 | 216 |
Education as Training for Virtue | 220 |
Education sections 45 70 94 99100 135 159 | 221 |
Two Treatises II sections 5861 639 | 231 |
Social Groups and the Origin of Civil Society | 237 |
Two Treatises II sections 7789 | 240 |
Toleration Works VI pp 945 | 245 |
Two Treatises II sections 115 | 276 |
Two Treatises II sections 1004 | 283 |
Two Treatises II sections 12431 | 285 |
Two Treatises II sections 2539 | 288 |
Political Obligation and Consent | 296 |
Two Treatises II sections 15964 | 304 |
Two Treatises II sections 2413 | 317 |
Conclusion | 319 |
Bibliography | 330 |
332 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Locke Reader: Selections from the Works of John Locke with a General ... John W. Yolton Sin vista previa disponible - 1977 |
Términos y frases comunes
able actions agree agreement amongst appear apply authority believe belong body cause certainty church civil clear colour comes common complex concepts concerning consider consists depend determined discourse discover distinct doubt equal Essay essence examine existence eyes farther figure follow force give given hands hath ignorance innate judge knowledge known language legislative less light live Locke Locke's look mankind matter meaning mind modes moral motion names nature necessary never objects observe operations opinion original particular perceive perception perhaps person present principles produce propositions punishment qualities reason receive reflection relation religion rule sense signification signs simple ideas society sort soul sounds speak species stand substances suppose taken things thought tion true truth understanding unto virtue whereby wherein