John Locke
.... In the state of nature, according to
Locke,
people lived in "perfect freedom to order their actions, and dispose of their possessions as they think fit ... ....
(1886

8

)
John Locke The period of the eighteenth century, at least t
.... According to
Locke,
people lived together, after being born cooperative and with a sense of goodness, in a state of _____ 2 John
Locke, Two ....
(1423

6

)
Ideas of Locke, Rousseau & Hobbes
.... According to
Locke,
people live together, after being born cooperative and with a sense of goodness, in a state of nature and according to reason. ....
(1230

5

)
Rousseau & Locke on Society
.... between the theories of the two men, but they differ most importantly when Rousseau gives all power to the sovereign, and
Locke lets the
people keep the ....
(1162

5

)
The Political Theory of John Locke
.... Still, compared to Hobbes, for example,
Locke gives to the
people (or at least the
people with property) a greater degree of power in establishing and changing ....
(1634

7

)
Comparison of Beliefs of Hobbes and Locke
The study will argue that the basic difference between the two philosophers is Hobbes' distrust of the
people and
Locke's relatively greater trust of the ....
(1917

8

)
Richard II and Locke
.... and
people are in controversy and the prince's behavior means the
people have no remedy except "heaven,"
Locke privileges "the body of the
people," who are ....
(969

4

)
Hobbes & Locke
.... Hobbes.
Locke viewed
people as being at peace in the state of nature.
Locke believed
people were naturally kind. Whereas Hobbes ....
(1657

7

)
LOCKE AND HOBBES ON GOVERNMENT
.... wishful thinking.
Locke gives
people more credit, but also has a restraining hold on what one might call "total" freedom. He expands ....
(1976

8

)
Locke's Influence on the Declaration of Independence
.... who had "grow[n] exorbitant in the use of their power and employ[ed] it for the destruction and not the protection of the properties of their
people" (
Locke 128 ....
(2297

9

)
Concepts of Equality in Locke and Rousseau
.... by the
people, and, in
Locke's view, that government remains legitimate because its leaders have been appointed to make the laws by the
people (
Locke, 1980, p ....
(2002

8

)
John Locke and the Limits of Liberty
....
Locke stresses the importance of the consent of the
people to their government, but that consent is reasonable only if the government is able to keep order and ....
(1347

5

)
Locke, Hobbes and Roussau on Government
.... conception of human nature and of reason for this statement by
Locke is based .... In the state of nature, the
people had freedom and sovereignty over themselves. ....
(1052

4

)
John Locke
.... religious ideas based on tolerance were antagonistic to the King, "Owen introduced
Locke to the idea of religious freedom and the idea that
people should not ....
(2191

9

)
Compare and Contrast - Hobbes and Locke: The role of government
.... Schick and Vaughn (1999, p. 308) put it this way: "To protect their rights
Locke thought that
people would agree to invest the state with the power to make and ....
(1814

7

)
Locke's Second Treatise of Government
....
Locke concludes that the
people as well as the good government are protected by the civil system he has set up: "If they have set limits to the duration of ....
(2217

9

)
John Locke and Pierre Bayle
.... However,
Locke argued that two groups of
people should certainly be excluded from this social contract to which all others belonged: Catholics and atheists. ....
(1029

4

)
Machiavelli, Hobbes & Locke
.... because he is not ruling according to the duties of his subjects, then the
people have a right to resist the ruler. In the natural state,
Locke felt we all ....
(2550

10

)
Plato, Luther, Locke & Marx on Equality
....
Locke at least tries to rationalize such inequality with belabored analyses of the
people's rights, but when push comes to shove, the leader remains in power ....
(1836

7

)
Locke, Rousseau & Mill on Government
.... principles presented by
Locke and Rousseau at an earlier time. Having accepted membership in a society, Mill (519) believed that all
people were obligated to ....
(1410

6

)
Locke, Rousseau, Dewey
.... In such cases,
Locke argued, the ruler had placed himself outside the law and the
people were no longer subject to the rule of law in their treatment of him. ....
(2633

11

)
Jurgen Habermas and John Locke
.... With
Locke's relative trust in the
people to reason, and to follow the moral law which such reason discerns, he gives them so power to change their government ....
(2021

8

)
Locke 2nd Treatise on Gov
.... to the
people and community, with power having limits due to moral law and constitutional traditions and conventions. However, this moral law to
Locke is ....
(1000

4

)
Locke and Rousseau
Both
Locke and Rousseau assumed that residence in a state implied tacit consent .... allowing for consent or dissent." This choice is not available to most
people. ....
(3136

13

)
John Locke On The Limits of Liberty & Property
.... Therefore,
Locke would establish a relatively democratic government which gives the
people legal protection and security for their lives and property which ....
(1325

5

)
John Locke and Thomas Hobbes
.... no longer protect his subjects, that is the end of his rule, the end of the social contract or covenant with the
people, in keeping with
Locke, Rousseau, and ....
(1671

7

)
Locke & Hobbes on Political Science
.... no longer protect his subjects, that is the end of his rule, the end of the social contract or covenant with the
people, in keeping with
Locke, Rousseau, and ....
(1641

7

)
JOHN LOCKE'S THEORY OF NATURAL LAW
.... To settle any conflicts among these Industrious
people, God, so
Locke explains, has set up a system of governments to both adjudicate disputes, set rules which ....
(1262

5

)
Locke's & Marx's Views on Theory of Value & Property
.... Reason, argues
Locke, is God's gift to humankind so that
people can make the best use of the goods, in common, of the earth. (
Locke ....
(2301

9

)
Locke and Rousseau on the Nature of Government
....
Locke (1986, p. 77) saw promulgated and established laws as making it possible that "the
people may know their duty, and be safe and secure within the limits ....
(2781

11

)