For three decades, John Locke has been the object of a tug-of-war between scholars who view him as the father of modern liberalism and those who view him as an exponent of civic republicanism. A closer reading of Lockes life and thought reveals that he was both, and that the ahistorical liberal-republican debate has obscured rather than illuminated the nature of Lockes radicalism and influence.
Jerome Huyler is an independent scholar and author living in Brooklyn, New York.
Other Independent Review articles by Jerome Huyler | |
Winter 2018/19 | Reader Response: The Road to Crony Capitalism: Locke, Jefferson and American History |
Summer 1997 | The Myth of American Individualism |