John Locke, Edward Stillingfleet, and the Quarrel over Consensus
Date
2017-02Author
Carey, Daniel
Metadata
Show full item recordUsage
This item's downloads: 948 (view details)
Cited 0 times in Scopus (view citations)
Recommended Citation
Carey, Daniel. (2017). John Locke, Edward Stillingfleet and the Quarrel over Consensus. Paragraph, 40(1), 61-80. doi: 10.3366/para.2017.0215
Published Version
Abstract
Philosophical antagonism and dispute by no means confined to the early modern period nonetheless enjoyed a moment of particular ferment as new methods and orientations on questions of epistemology and ethics developed in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. John Locke played a key part in them with controversies initiated by the Essay concerning Human Understanding (1690). This essay develops a wider typology of modes of philosophical quarrelling by focusing on a key debate the issue of whether human nature came pre-endowed with innate ideas and principles, resulting in a moral consensus across mankind, or remained, on the contrary, dependent on reason to achieve moral insight, and, in practice, divided by diverse and irreconcilable cultural practices as a result of the force of custom and the limited purchase of reason. The essay ultimately concludes on the idea that we should not only attend to the genealogy of disputes but also to the morphology of disputation as a practice.