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The Lockean Theory of Rights
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and
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2020
About this book
John Locke's political theory has been the subject of many detailed treatments by philosophers and political scientists. But The Lockean Theory of Rights is the first systematic, full-length study of Locke's theory of rights and of its potential for making genuine contributions to contemporary debates about rights and their place in political philosophy. Given that the rights of persons are the central moral concept at work in Locke's and Lockean political philosophy, such a study is long overdue.
Author / Editor information
A. John Simmons is Professor of Philosophy at University of Virginia.
Reviews
"The Lockean Theory of Rights is an exceptionally good book: Strong, clear, forceful, level-headed, and magnificently patient-an object lesson in educational maturity."
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". . . a comprehensive monograph that goes beyond a learned interpretation of Locke's texts to a reconstruction of a more plausible and contemporarily more acceptable, Lockean theory of rights . . . [T]his penetrating and sympathetic study is a welcome antidote to some tendentious recent monographs, of equal interest to the philosophically and historically inclined."---Ross Rudolph, Canadian Review of Political Science
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"[Simmons] succeeds triumphantly in showing that the issues are still alive, and that even if Locke cannot solve our problems, he has much to contribute to an understanding of them."---Susan L. Mendus, Ethics
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"[Simmon's] densely argued and heavily referenced work--he reveals deep knowledge of both the primary and secondary literature and overturns many a famous name in a footnote--provides us with a powerful analysis of what is probably the central moral concept of Locke's political philosophy, namely his theory of rights."---G. A. J. Rogers, The Times Higher Education Supplement
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". . . a remarkable volume--by far the best treatment of Locke's account of rights and one that is likely to remain so, because it treats the texts with intelligent scholarship and argues with a high degree of sophistication. . ."---Ian Harris, American Political Science Review
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"A powerful analysis. . . . [It] succeeds in demonstrating the depth and cogency of much of Locke's moral and political thought and leaves us with a number of excellent reasons for believing that . . . talk of natural rights of a distinctly Lockean kind is indispensable for any satisfactory account of the just society."---G. A. J. Rogers, The Times Higher Education Supplement
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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CONTENTS
vii -
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LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
ix -
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
xi -
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INTRODUCTION
1 -
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ONE. THE STRUCTURE OF LOCKE'S MORAL THEORY
14 -
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TWO. LOCKE AND NATURAL RIGHTS
68 -
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THREE. THE RIGHT TO PUNISH
121 -
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FOUR. RIGHTS AND THE FAMILY
167 -
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FIVE. PROPERTY RIGHTS
222 -
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SIX. JUSTICE AND CHARITY
307 -
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CONCLUSION
353 -
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WORKS CITED
355 -
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INDEX
377
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
December 7, 2020
eBook ISBN:
9780691221311
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook ISBN:
9780691221311
Keywords for this book
Theory; Natural and legal rights; Political philosophy; Morality; John Locke; Rights; Two Treatises of Government; Right to property; State of nature; Civil society; Obligation; Treatise; Philosophy; Private property; Ethics; Suggestion; Jurisdiction; Ownership; Reason; Critique; Philosopher; Principle; Laborer; Toleration; Thomas Hobbes; Paternalism; Republicanism; Liberalism; Consideration; Lockean proviso; Explanation; Personhood; A Letter Concerning Toleration; Kantianism; Attempt; Moral absolutism; Requirement; Special rights; Consequentialism; Original appropriation; God; Prima facie; Positive law; A Theory of Justice; Rationality; On Liberty; Gratitude; Self-ownership; Duty to rescue; Spouse; Natural law; Entitlement theory; Wealth; Theft; Children's rights; Lecture; Communitarianism; Self-sufficiency; Discretion; Philosophical Explanations; Person; Understanding; Improvement; Natural morality; Essays (Montaigne); Thought; Writing; Utilitarianism; Failure; Debt
Audience(s) for this book
For a non-specialist adult audience