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The Two Intellectual Worlds Of John Locke Man Person And Spirits In The Essay John W Yolton

  • SKU: BELL-51939118
The Two Intellectual Worlds Of John Locke Man Person And Spirits In The Essay John W Yolton
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The Two Intellectual Worlds Of John Locke Man Person And Spirits In The Essay John W Yolton instant download after payment.

Publisher: Cornell University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 26.27 MB
Pages: 208
Author: John W. Yolton
ISBN: 9781501719561, 1501719564
Language: English
Year: 2018

Product desciption

The Two Intellectual Worlds Of John Locke Man Person And Spirits In The Essay John W Yolton by John W. Yolton 9781501719561, 1501719564 instant download after payment.

Using his intimate knowledge of John Locke's writings, John W. Yolton shows that Locke comprehends "human understanding" as a subset of a larger understanding of other intelligent Beings—angels, spirits, and an omniscient God. Locke's books on Christianity (The Reasonableness of Christianity and Paraphrases of St. Paul's Epistles) have received extensive analysis and commentary, but little attention has been given to the place of his Essay concerning Human Understanding in his religious and theological beliefs. Yolton shows that Locke's account of what it is to be human in that work is profoundly religious.Yolton's book opens with an attempt to sort out several important terms basic to Locke's account of identity: man, self, person, and soul. A number of rarely examined components of Locke's thought emerge: the nature of man, the nature of a human being, and the place of man in the universe among the other creatures. Some will be surprised to learn that the domain of God, angels, and spirits is a part of Locke's universe, where it is considered the hoped-for destination of the just.The Two Intellectual Worlds of John Locke also includes Yolton's exploration of Locke's commitment to immaterial principles for understanding the world; his obsession with happiness; the dialectical tensions between man, person, and soul; several interesting conjectures about spirits; and the notion of natural philosophy that includes speculation about spirits as well as bodies.

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