John Locke: Natural Rights To Life, Liberty, and Property: Locke's Writings Did Much To Inspire The American Revolution
John Locke: Natural Rights To Life, Liberty, and Property: Locke's Writings Did Much To Inspire The American Revolution
John Locke: Natural Rights To Life, Liberty, and Property: Locke's Writings Did Much To Inspire The American Revolution
Family Background
John Locke was born in Somerset, England, August 29, 1632. He was the eldest son of
Agnes Keene, daughter of a small-town tanner, and John Locke, an impecunious Puritan
lawyer who served as a clerk for justices of the peace.
When young Locke was two, England began to stumble toward its epic constitutional
crisis. The Stuart King Charles I, who dreamed of the absolute power wielded by some
continental rulers, decreed higher taxes without approval of Parliament. They were to be
collected by local officials like his father. Eight years later, the Civil War broke out, and
Locke’s father briefly served as a captain in the Parliamentary army. In 1649, rebels
beheaded Charles I. But all this led to the Puritan dictatorship of Oliver Cromwell.
Locke had a royalist and Anglican education, presumably because it was still a ticket to
upward mobility. One of his father’s politically connected associates nominated 15-year-old
John Locke for the prestigious Westminster School. In 1652, he won a scholarship to
Christ Church, Oxford University’s most important college, which trained men mainly for
the clergy. He studied logic, metaphysics, Greek, and Latin. He earned his bachelor of arts
degree in 1656, then continued work toward a master of arts and taught rhetoric and
Greek. On the side, he spent considerable time studying with free spirits who, at the dawn
of modern science and medicine, independently conducted experiments.
Having lived through a bloody civil war, Locke seems to have shared the fears expressed
by fellow Englishman Thomas Hobbes, whose Leviathan (1651) became the gospel of
absolutism. Hobbes asserted that liberty brought chaos, that the worst government was
better than no government—and that people owed allegiance to their ruler, right or wrong.
In October 1656, Locke wrote a letter expressing approval that Quakers—whom he called
“mad folks”—were subject to restrictions. Locke welcomed the 1660 restoration of the
Stuart monarchy and subsequently wrote two tracts that defended the prerogative of
government to enforce religious conformity.
In November 1665, as a result of his Oxford connections, Locke was appointed to a
diplomatic mission aimed at winning the Elector of Brandenburg as an ally against Holland.
The mission failed, but the experience was a revelation. Brandenburg had a policy of
toleration for Catholics, Calvinists, and Lutherans, and there was peace. Locke wrote his
friend Robert Boyle, the chemist: “They quietly permit one another to choose their way to
heaven; and I cannot observe any quarrels or animosities amongst them on account of
religion.”