This article reconstructs the main arguments in John Locke’s first political writings, the highly rhetorical, and often obscure, Two Tracts on Government (1660–1662). The Tracts support the government’s right to impose religious ceremonies on its people, an astonishing fact given Locke’s famous defense of toleration in his later works. The reconstruction of the Tracts developed here allows us to see that rather than a pessimistic view of the prospects for peace under religious diversity, what mainly animates the young Locke is a desire to defend the rule of law against an anarchical conception of religious freedom. The article also argues that the evolution of Locke’s thinking on religious freedom was in large part governed by Locke’s atte...
Freedom has no univocal meaning in Locke's work, despite its centrality. It is understood as a duty ...
Collects the political texts of seventeenth-century philosopher John Locke, and includes biographica...
Locke’s views on religious toleration are a “tremendously important contribution” on this subject, w...
This Article explores John Locke’s theory of religious liberty, which deeply influenced the adoption...
John Locke is famous for his liberal and tolerationist works, published in the aftermath of the Glor...
The existence of a commonly held civil theology or public orthodoxy is a precondition of a viable an...
John Locke, English philosopher of the 17th century, devoted considerable effort to the discussion o...
The canonical image of John Locke as one of the first philosophes is so deeply engrained that we co...
The canonical image of John Locke as one of the first philosophes is so deeply engrained that we co...
Theological and political concepts and practices are frequently deeply related in political thought....
Locke’s religious conception of morality played a primary role in shaping his views on toleration a...
Locke’s Second Treatise of Government lays the foundation for a fully liberal order that includes re...
This study aims to elaborate the thoughts of John Locke on civil society and religious tolerance. Th...
Recently, scholars have disputed whether Locke's political theory should be read as the groundwork o...
15 pagesThis article brings Carl Schmitt's Political Theology into conversation with John Locke's Se...
Freedom has no univocal meaning in Locke's work, despite its centrality. It is understood as a duty ...
Collects the political texts of seventeenth-century philosopher John Locke, and includes biographica...
Locke’s views on religious toleration are a “tremendously important contribution” on this subject, w...
This Article explores John Locke’s theory of religious liberty, which deeply influenced the adoption...
John Locke is famous for his liberal and tolerationist works, published in the aftermath of the Glor...
The existence of a commonly held civil theology or public orthodoxy is a precondition of a viable an...
John Locke, English philosopher of the 17th century, devoted considerable effort to the discussion o...
The canonical image of John Locke as one of the first philosophes is so deeply engrained that we co...
The canonical image of John Locke as one of the first philosophes is so deeply engrained that we co...
Theological and political concepts and practices are frequently deeply related in political thought....
Locke’s religious conception of morality played a primary role in shaping his views on toleration a...
Locke’s Second Treatise of Government lays the foundation for a fully liberal order that includes re...
This study aims to elaborate the thoughts of John Locke on civil society and religious tolerance. Th...
Recently, scholars have disputed whether Locke's political theory should be read as the groundwork o...
15 pagesThis article brings Carl Schmitt's Political Theology into conversation with John Locke's Se...
Freedom has no univocal meaning in Locke's work, despite its centrality. It is understood as a duty ...
Collects the political texts of seventeenth-century philosopher John Locke, and includes biographica...
Locke’s views on religious toleration are a “tremendously important contribution” on this subject, w...