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  1. An essay concerning human understanding.John Locke - 1689 - New York: Oxford University Press. Edited by Pauline Phemister.
    The book also includes a chronological table of significant events, select bibliography, succinct explanatory notes, and an index--all of which supply ...
  • Enquiries concerning the human understanding and concerning the principles of morals.David Hume (ed.) - 1777 - Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
    A scholarly edition of a work by David Hume. The edition presents an authoritative text, together with an introduction, commentary notes, and scholarly apparatus.
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  • John Locke.Richard Ithamar Aaron - 1937 - New York [etc.]: Oxford university press.
    In this third edition of "John Locke", the text is divided into three parts. The first is biographical, giving an account of the development of Locke's mind. The second expounds the teaching of the "Essay", and relates this to its background; while the third deals with Locke's teaching in political theory, moral philosophy, education, and religion. -- From publisher's description.
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  • Fact, Fiction, and Forecast.Nelson Goodman - 1965 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
  • John Locke.W. von Leyden - 1956 - Philosophical Quarterly 6 (23):182.
  • The British Moralists and the Internal 'Ought': 1640-1740.Nicholas L. Sturgeon - 1997 - Journal of Philosophy 94 (5):266.
  • Dispositions.Elizabeth W. Prior - 1985 - Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press.
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  • Dispositions.Edward Craig - 1987 - Philosophical Quarterly 37 (146):109-111.
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  • The moral philosophy of cudworth.John Arthur Passmore - 1942 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 20 (3):161 – 183.
  • The moral philosophy of Cudworth.J. A. Passmore - 1942 - Australasian Journal of Psychology and Philosophy 20 (3):161-183.
  • New Essays on Human Understanding.R. M. Mattern - 1984 - Philosophical Review 93 (2):315.
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  • Locke on Active Power and the Obscure Idea of Active Power from Bodies.R. M. Mattern - 1980 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 11 (1):39.
  • Natural Necessity.Edward Madden - 1973 - New Scholasticism 47 (2):214-227.
  • New Essays on Human Understanding.Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz - 1981 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Peter Remnant & Jonathan Bennett.
    In the New Essays on Human Understanding, Leibniz argues chapter by chapter with John Locke's Essay Concerning Human Understanding, challenging his views about knowledge, personal identity, God, morality, mind and matter, nature versus nurture, logic and language, and a host of other topics. The work is a series of sharp, deep discussions by one great philosopher of the work of another. Leibniz's references to his contemporaries and his discussions of the ideas and institutions of the age make this a fascinating (...)
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  • The Epistemology under Lockes Corpuscularianism.Michael Jacovides - 2002 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 84 (2):161-189.
    The intelligibility of our artifacts suggests to many seventeenth century thinkers that nature works along analogous lines, that the same principles that explain the operations of artifacts explain the operations of natural bodies.1 We may call this belief ‘corpuscularianism’ when conjoined with the premise that the details of the analogy depend upon the sub-microscopic textures of ordinary bodies and upon the rapidly moving, imperceptibly tiny corpuscles that surround these bodies.2 Locke’s sympathy for corpuscularianism comes out clearly where he describes the (...)
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  • Fact, Fiction and Forecast.Edward H. Madden - 1955 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 16 (2):271-273.
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  • Authorship of Gregory's Critique of Hume.John Dunn - 1964 - Journal of the History of Ideas 25 (1):128.
  • Locke on the ontology of matter, living things and persons.Vere Chappell - 1990 - Philosophical Studies 60 (1-2):19 - 32.
  • The ideas of power and substance in Locke's philosophy.M. Ayers - 1975 - Philosophical Quarterly 25 (98):1-27.
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  • A treatise of human nature.David Hume & D. G. C. Macnabb (eds.) - 1969 - Harmondsworth,: Penguin Books.
    One of Hume's most well-known works and a masterpiece of philosophy, A Treatise of Human Nature is indubitably worth taking the time to read.
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  • Causality and determination: an inaugural lecture.Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe - 1971 - London,: Cambridge University Press.
    I IT is often declared or evidently assumed that causality is some kind of necessary connexion, or alternatively, that being caused is — non-trivially ...
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  • The British Moralists and the Internal 'Ought': 1640–1740.Stephen L. Darwall - 1995 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book is a major work in the history of ethics, and provides the first study of early modern British philosophy in several decades. Professor Darwall discerns two distinct traditions feeding into the moral philosophy of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. On the one hand, there is the empirical, naturalist tradition, comprising Hobbes, Locke, Cumberland, Hutcheson, and Hume, which argues that obligation is the practical force that empirical discoveries acquire in the process of deliberation. On the other hand, there is (...)
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  • Locke and the Ethics of Belief.J. A. Passmore - 1998 - In Vere Chappell (ed.), Locke. Oxford University Press.
  • Locke on the Freedom of the Will.Vere Chappell - 1998 - In Locke. Oxford University Press.
     
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  • Locke on the freedom of the will.Vere Chappell - 1994 - In G. A. J. Rogers (ed.), Locke's Philosophy: Content and Context. Oxford University Press. pp. 101--21.
    Locke was a libertarian: he believed in human freedom. To be sure, his conception of freedom was different from that of many philosophers who call themselves libertarians. Some such philosophers maintain that an agent is free only if her action is uncaused; whereas Locke thought that all actions have causes, including the free ones. Some libertarians hold that no action is free unless it proceeds from a volition that is itself free; whereas Locke argued that free volition, as opposed to (...)
     
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  • Hume.B. Stroud - 1978 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 29 (4):398-399.
  • The organic soul.Katharine Park - 1988 - In Charles B. Schmitt, Quentin Skinner & Eckhard Kessler (eds.), The Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy. Cambridge University Press. pp. 464--84.
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