A letter concerning toleration and other writings /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Locke, John, 1632-1704, author.
Imprint:Indianapolis : Liberty Fund.
©2010
Description:1 online resource (xlvii, 208 pages)
Language:English
Series:The Thomas Hollis library
Thomas Hollis library.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11268274
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other uniform titles:Epistola de tolerantia. English.
Other authors / contributors:Goldie, Mark, author.
ISBN:1614878250
9781614878254
9780865977907
0865977909
9780865977914
0865977917
Digital file characteristics:data file
Notes:Translated from the Latin.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Print version record.
Summary:A Letter Concerning Toleration and Other Writings brings together the principal writings on religious toleration and freedom of expression by one of the greatest philosophers in the Anglophone tradition: John Locke. The son of Puritans, Locke (632-1704): became an Oxford academic, a physician, and; through the patronage of the Earl of Shaftesbury; secretary to the Council of Trade arid. Plantations and to the Lords Proprietors of Carolina. A colleague of Robert Boyle and Isaac Newton and a member of the English Royal Society, Locke lived and wrote at the dawn of the Enlightenment, a period during Which traditional mores, values, and customs were being questioned.
This volume opens with Locke's Letter Concerning Toleration: (1689) and also Contains his earlier Essay Concerning Toleration (1667), extracts from the Third Letter for Toleration (1692), and a large body of his briefer essays and memoranda on this theme. As editor Mark Goldie writes in the introduction, A Letter Concerning Toleration "was one of the seventeenth century's most eloquent pleas to Christians to renounce religious persecution." Locke's contention, fleshed out in the Essay and in the Third Letter, that men should enjoy a perfect and "uncontrollable liberty" in matters of religion was shocking to Many in seventeenth-century England. Still More shocking, perhaps, Was its corollary, that the Magistrate had no standing in matters of religion. Taken together, these works forcefully present Locke's belief in interrelation between limited government and religious freedom. At a time when the world is again having to come to terms with profound tensions among diverse religions and cultures, they are a canonical statement of the case for religious and intellectual freedom.
Liberty Fund presents the first fully annotated edition of Locke's writings on toleration, offering guidance to his rich reservoir of, references and allusions. The editor's extensive introduction describes the historical, theological, and philosophical: contexts needed for understanding: Locke's work.
This book is the first volume in the Thomas Hollis Library series: As general editor David Womersley explains, Thomas Hollis (1720-1774) was businessman and philanthropist Who gathered books he thought were essential to the understanding Of liberty and donated them to libraries in Europe and America in the years preceding the American Revolution.
Mark Goldie is Reader in British Intellectual History at the University of Cambridge and is co-editor of The Cambridge History of Political Thought 1450-1700 and editor of John Locke. Two Treatises of Government and John Locke: Political Essays.
David Womersley is Thomas Warton Professor Of English Literature at the University of Oxford. His most recent book is Divinity and State. --Book Jacket.
Other form:Print version: Locke, John, 1632-1704. Epistola de tolerantia. English. Letter concerning toleration and other writings. Indianapolis : Liberty Fund, ©2010 9780865977907
Table of Contents:
  • John Locke, A Letter Concerning Toleration and Other Writings
  • Front Matter
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Details
  • Table of Contents
  • The Thomas Hollis Library, p. vii
  • Introduction, p. ix
  • Further Reading, p. xxv
  • Notes on the Texts, p. xxix
  • Chronology of Locke's Life, p. xli
  • Acknowledgments, p. xlvii
  • A Letter Concerning Toleration, p. 1
  • Excerpts from A Third Letter for Toleration, p. 69
  • An Essay Concerning Toleration, p. 105
  • Fragments on Toleration, p. 141
  • Index, p. 191