POLITICAL THEORY - John Locke - YouTube

Channel: The School of Life

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The 17th century English philosopher, John Locke,
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is to be remembered for his wise and brilliant contributions
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to three great issues that continue to concern us to this day:
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how we should educate our children,
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who should rule over us,
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and what we should do about people who have different religious ideas to us.
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Locke was born into a quiet Somerset village in 1632.
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He was 10 years old when the English civil war broke out,
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and his father became captain in the parliamentary army.
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King Charles I was publicly executed in 1649, just a few feet away from where Locke was studying:
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at Westminster School.
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The screams of the crowds heard in the library marked him deeply.
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Locke went on to study medicine at Oxford
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and planned to be a doctor,
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but his life changed significantly when, by chance,
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he became acquainted with the dashing and highly ambitious Greek politician, Antony Ashley Cooper--
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known as the "First Earl of Shaftesbury," who'd come to Oxford to look for a cure for a liver disease he had.
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Cooper suggested that Locke move to London to become part of his household.
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The offer was hard to resist, and once part of Cooper's entourage,
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Locke began to participate in the great scientific, educational, religious, and political debates of the day.
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Along the way, he also helped to cure Shaftesbury of his liver complaint, earning his lifelong gratitude.
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The first question Locke grew fascinated by, was what to do with people who don't agree with your religious views.
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In breaking away from the Catholic Church under Henry VIII in the 16th century,
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English Protestantism had started a process of noisy questioning of religion
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that couldn't now easily be stopped.
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Because this was threatening to get out of hand, there were arguments that there should be
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total government control over religion, and a hard crack down on dissenters.
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But Locke became one of the foremost advocates of freedom of belief in his beautiful, essay concerning
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toleration, written in 1667.
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Here, he advocated toleration on the basis of three points.
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Firstly, 'because Earthly judges, the state in particular, and human beings in general, cannot dependably
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evaluate the truth-claims of competing religious standpoints.'
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Secondly, 'even if they could, enforcing a single "true religion" would never work, because you can't be
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compelled into belief through violence.'
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And thirdly, 'coercing religious uniformity leads to far more social disorder than allowing diversity.'
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Locke argued that the ultimate aim of the state was just to preserve the quiet and comfortable living of men in
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society, but that it'd have nothing to do with the good of men's souls.
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Religion was a personal choice, and churches were voluntary organizations,
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which could set their own rules and be left to it.
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It was thanks to Locke's influence, that the idea of locking up
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people for their beliefs fell entirely out of favor.
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By the 18th century, other European nations looked with envy at England;
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a place where what you happen to believe was simply deemed
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irrelevant to your statues or prospects.
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This was a truly remarkable achievement for one book, by one man to have set in train,
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but Locke didn't stop there. In 1689, he published a second extraordinary book;
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The Two Treatises of Government.
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This tried to answer the question of who should rule the country and on what legitimate bases.
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One common yet increasingly fanciful notion at the time, was that political authority derived directly from God.
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But a more recent explanation from Thomas Hobbes had asserted that
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the totalitarian power of kings was justified by their ability to keep order
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and prevent repetitions of the chaos that had rained; Hobbes had insisted,
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in the time before powerful governments and that he had called;
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the state of nature.
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By painting the state of nature in the darkest colors, Hobbes had asked his readers
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to set themselves low expectations, for what a decent ruler was meant to be.
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Anything better than the savagery of the Stone Age was legitimate,
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and rulers have no responsibility to guarantee religious freedom or human rights.
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But now, in the First Treatise, Locke thoroughly demolished the Scriptural claim;
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that God had created kings.
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And in the Second Treatise, he took on Hobbes's ideas about the state of nature.
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Locke agreed with Hobbes that before without government, there would have been a State of Nature.
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But he disagreed what this place would actually have been like,
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he argued; that it would have been broadly peaceful, and that in agreeing to summit to governments,
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people have therefore not, fearfully agreed to surrender all their rights.
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In fact, they possessed a range of alienable or natural rights that no ruler could ever take away.