No Man
No Man
No Man
” John Locke
once stated that for the human race to acquire knowledge, they must
experience different things. Without doing, seeing, feeling, smelling, or
hearing, man cannot learn. When a child is born, it is innocent.
It means what a person does or his actions, truly and clearly reflect his
thinking. In other words, people can know your thoughts, by seeing what you
do.
An Essay Concerning Human Understanding - a four volume work, was published in 1689.
John Locke was an English philosopher and physician, often considered as one of the greatest and
most influential Enlightenment thinkers in history.
Career Path:
Locke took a position at Christ Church College, Oxford in 1663 and was introduced to Lord Anton
Ashley Cooper (later known as the 1st Earl of Shaftsbury) in 1666. The following year he became his
aide and personal physician.
He became a fellow of the Royal Society in 1668 and undertook medical research.
Additionally, Locke helped draft “The Fundamental Constitutions for the Government of Carolina” in
1669.
In 1675 he moved to France and remained there for four years, spending most of his time in Paris
and Montpellier.
Locke returned to England in 1679 but due to political turmoil over the succession to the throne, left
for Holland in 1683. He remained there for five years returning to England when James II was
overthrown and William of Orange and Mary came to the throne.
He then lived with a friend in Essex until his death.
Locke’s political philosophy is often noted with shaping both the American Constitution and the
French Revolution and laid the groundwork for liberal political thought.
He was the first person to explain the self through a continuity of consciousness. He proposed that
the mind was a blank slate or tabula rasa.
His most noted work is “An Essay Concerning Human Understanding”, a four volume work, was
published in 1689. It provides a thorough account of how we acquire everyday, numerical, scientific,
religious and ethical knowledge.
Some of the Locke’s other most noted works are “Essays on the Law of Nature”, “Some Thoughts
Concerning Education” and “A Letter Concerning Toleration”.
His 1695 publication “The Reasonableness of Christianity” is considered to be his most important
theological work in which he argued that differences of worship could and should be tolerated.