The empire of habit : John Locke, discipline, and the origins of liberalism

Author(s)

    • Baltes, John

Bibliographic Information

The empire of habit : John Locke, discipline, and the origins of liberalism

John Baltes

University of Rochester Press, 2016

  • : hardcover

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [145]-152) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Empire of Habit critiques the traditional interpretation of Locke's political thought, revealing that the foundation of Lockean liberalism is not natural law but discipline and habit. John Locke's political thought provides much of the theoretical underpinning for our own liberal democracy. According to Locke's liberalism, the rights and freedoms of civil society are grounded in natural law, which is known andobserved by all citizens. In this volume, John Baltes challenges this interpretation of Locke. Examining Locke's Essay Concerning Human Understanding and Some Thoughts Concerning Education, Baltes reveals aLocke who is in conflict with the natural-law philosopher found in his famous Two Treatises of Government. In his works on epistemology and education, Locke describes morality as a construct and human nature as malleable. Drawing on Foucault's concept of discipline, Baltes reconsiders Locke's liberalism and shows that it requires citizens governed not by natural law but habit, that is, subjects who are constructed by carefully controlled space and visibility and regulated in their conduct to become capable of self-government. The Empire of Habit thus offers not only a new reading of one of the most important political philosophers of the Western tradition but also newinsight into our own political liberalism. John Baltes is an independent scholar of political theory.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Abbreviations Introduction Locke on Religious Crisis and Civil War: Nominalism, Skepticism, and the Essay in Context Locke's Inverted Quarantine: Discipline, Panopticism, and the Making of the Liberal Subject Locke's Labor Loosed: Discipline and the Idle Locke the Landgrave: Inegalitarian Discipline Notes Bibliography Index

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