I attended a modest party on the second floor in a pub — it was a cash bar — in London’s fashionable City of Westminster area to witness the launch of Christoph Schuringa’s (2025) A Social History of Analytic Philosophy (Verso; hereafter A Social History
Off-topic, but I'd be interested in something spelling out your views on Locke and liberalism. If he isn't the fount of liberalism, he is surely the fount of something influential (particularly USian) political thought. What do you see as this something, and what is its relationship to liberalism?
Off-topic, but I'd be interested in something spelling out your views on Locke and liberalism. If he isn't the fount of liberalism, he is surely the fount of something influential (particularly USian) political thought. What do you see as this something, and what is its relationship to liberalism?
Will try to complete a scholarly paper on it this summer
Liberalism is a response to it.
Yes locke --> Hamilton’s mercantilism