Abstract
This chapter treats all the rest of the main possible criticism against the validity of the main source whose responsibilities to nature are proposed in this book while the rest of the arguments against the validity of his responsibilities are invalidated one by one in Chapter 9. It treats those arguments again, one by one while rebutting those arguments with citations from the main source with corroboration by modern authors. It specifically treats Locke’s repeated theological references to God, the misunderstanding of the literal labour-mixing theory, the notion of self-ownership as possible argument for slavery interpretation and the argument of Natural law: ‘nonsense upon stilts’—utilitarian view of natural rights. It further deals with other possible objections to Locke’s labour theory.
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Notes
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This is highly supported by Simmons (1992, 10–12, 45–46). See other modern supporters below.
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Even Dunn, who argues that Locke’s theological basis of argumentation is the most important basis for his arguments (Dunn 1969, 68, 187–188), claims that Locke’s use of reason is an additional basis of argumentation and says that Locke demonstrates ‘a persistent attempt to establish a rationalist position, worked out in close relationship with natural theology ’ (emphasis added); Dunn (1969, 188). In a way thus, Dunn also recognizes that Locke gives different arguments also based on reason alone.
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That is, in his Second Treatise, Locke demonstrates that Adam, as a symbol of God’s perfect creation, represents the full possession of reason. ‘Adam was created a perfect man, his body and mind in full possession of their strength and reason’ (emphasis added) (Locke II, 56; see also Locke II, 57).
Further, Locke writes, ‘our Reason leads us to the Knowledge of this certain and evident Truth, That there is an eternal, most powerful, and most knowing Being’ (emphasis added) (Locke 1689, Human Understanding, Bk. IV, Ch. 10, Para. 6).
Moreover, in his text on Human Understanding, Locke argues that we are bound by divine law based on ‘The Idea of a supreme Being, infinite in Power, Goodness, and Wisdom , whose Workmanship we are, and on whom we depend; and the idea of ourselves, as understanding rational Beings’ (emphasis added) (Locke 1689, Human Understanding, Bk. IV, Ch. 13, Para. 3).
Ashcraft confirms that ‘Locke is drawn into asserting that God is both reasonable and good, and hence men are able to adhere to the precepts of natural law not only as respecters of power but also as moral agents’ (Ashcraft 1968, 903).
Dunn goes as far as saying that for Locke: ‘God is determined by what is best’… ‘because his essence is Reason…God is actually reasonable because he is himself pure Reason’ (emphasis added) (cited in Dunn 1969, 193–194, emphasis added). Dunn (1969) thus says that for Locke, God represents pure reason without the corrupted passions of men.
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Moral Monism in Environmental Ethics is defended in Callicott (1999, 171–183).
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Hiller Marguerat, S. (2019). Locke’s Relevance to all Scholars in all Times. In: Private Property Rights and the Environment. Palgrave Studies in Environmental Policy and Regulation . Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-97900-7_10
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