John Locke Case Study

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1. Explain Locke 's views on property, taxing and collective consent. John Locke According to John Locke 's Theories Two Treaties of Government (1690), he believed that every person was born free and equal in which he calls the State of Nature. Although people are free however, they cannot do whatever they want. Governing the State of Nature is the Law of Nature. The Law of Nature states that we must preserve ourselves and other people and we all have the right to unalienable rights. These rights include “life, liberty, and property”. Locke states that the government should not conflict with those rights in any way. Locke claims that in order for a government to be legitimate, must have a foundation based upon collective consent and …show more content…

How is property a "natural right"? What is "conventional" right? All people possess in the State of Nature and thus by the Natural Law certain inalienable rights - the right to life, liberty, and property. Natural law theories hold that human beings are subject to a moral law. Morality is fundamentally about duty, the duty each individual has to abide by the natural law John Locke believed in the existence of a "Natural Law" that transcends any man-made law. Simply put all citizens have a right to "life, liberty and property." If the government is violating the people 's natural rights (life, liberty, and property/pursuit of happiness), then the people have a right to overthrow the government. Then there is the social contract. The people must do as the government say, the government does not take away the people 's natural rights, Locke allowed taxation to take place by the consent of the majority rather than requiring unanimous consent. He believes the majority may only tax at the rate needed to allow the government to successfully protect property …show more content…

What is the role of a legitimate government? What can it do, what can it NOT do? Be specific. A legitimate government’s role is to make laws and decisions govern with the consent of the governed. Consent is necessary because for any government to exist individuals must voluntarily surrender some of the freedom they would possess if they existed in "a state of nature" Citizens will surrender some liberty to create a government that allows them to prosper. Citizens must agree with the actions of the government at all times, giving them the right to abolish governments that do not benefit them. Locke realized that this is impossible in any society of size so he relied on the idea of a "general will" as expressed by the majority. 3. Explain the impact of Locke & Rousseau on Thomas Jefferson. Give examples from the text. The idea of inalienable rights. This is the idea that there are certain rights that are absolutely fundamental and that no government or political body has the right to alter them. This is idea is articulated in one of the most oft-quoted passages of the Declaration of Independence: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness". This last bit almost quotes Locke directly, from a passage in his 1690 publication Two Treatises, in which he defined the "natural rights" of men as "the right to life,

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