'As we know, Locke is a watered down version of Hobbes' ... this is certainly not what eighteenth-century followers of Locke thought. You might like to look at my ‘Catharine Macaulay and the Reception of Hobbes in the Eighteenth Century’ in Adam's, A Companion to Hobbes.
Oh I know that! I would claim nobody in the 18th century thought this, and have offered evidence from William Robertson and Blackstone (who are critics of Locke). I look forward to your paper.
'As we know, Locke is a watered down version of Hobbes' ... this is certainly not what eighteenth-century followers of Locke thought. You might like to look at my ‘Catharine Macaulay and the Reception of Hobbes in the Eighteenth Century’ in Adam's, A Companion to Hobbes.
Oh I know that! I would claim nobody in the 18th century thought this, and have offered evidence from William Robertson and Blackstone (who are critics of Locke). I look forward to your paper.