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3 - The Ascendancy of Rules of Evidence in Early Modern Philosophy of Religion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 December 2009

Charles Taliaferro
Affiliation:
St Olaf College, Minnesota
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Summary

Light, true light in the mind is, or can be nothing else but the evidence of the truth of any proposition; and if it be not a self-evident proposition, all the light it has, or can have, is from the clearness and validity of those proofs upon which it is received…. Reason must be our last judge and guide in everything.

John Locke

Locke's Essay

John Locke's Essay Concerning Human Understanding was published in 1689. His Essay places before us a salient case for governing our beliefs about ourselves, the world, and God by a fair-minded impartial weighing of evidence. John Locke began this work in 1670.

In the course of composing the Essay, Locke worked as secretary to the Earl of Shaftesbury (from 1667 to 1675), whose political career included vying for both sides in England's Civil War (first for the king, then for Parliament), playing an ambivalent role in Cromwell's government, and then acting as a commissioner who facilitated the restoration of the monarchy. He engaged in Anglo-European diplomacy, stood trial for treason, and went into exile in Holland. Locke's own life at the time of composing and publishing the essay was precarious. Locke was a Protestant like Shaftesbury, who favored the Protestant succession of the monarchy, along with parliamentary democracy and civil liberty. The reign of James II, a Roman Catholic, was an unstable period – socially, religiously, and politically – and this compelled Locke to seek refuge, like his patron, in Holland.

Type
Chapter
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Evidence and Faith
Philosophy and Religion since the Seventeenth Century
, pp. 110 - 159
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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