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Lockes Attack on Innate Ideas

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receives sense-impressions ... All concepts from experience, but not all knowledge ... Given that each of us has a separate and unique set of sense-experiences, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lockes Attack on Innate Ideas


1
Lockes Attack on Innate Ideas
2
Essay Statement of Purpose
  • search out the Bounds between Opinion and
    Knowledge (I, i, 3)
  • Be cautious in meddling with things exceeding
    the Minds Comprehension (I, i 4)
  • magnify the bountiful Author of our Being
  • Our Business here is not to know all things, but
    those which concern our Conduct
  • we need not be troubled, that some other things
    escape our Knowledge (I, i, 6).

3
Lockes Basic Epistemology
  • Human being tabula rasa (blank slate)
  • receives sense-impressions
  • some of these transformed by Mind into Ideas,
    i.e. objects as we represent them to ourselves
  • Ideas represented in language by words
  • no Ideas are innate no divine archetypes (cf.
    Platonic ideas/forms)
  • Mind is independent of any authority
  • All concepts from experience, but not all
    knowledge (e.g. of mathematical propositions)
    from experience.

4
Attacks Innatism (Descartes)
  • Lockes objections to innate ideas (IIs)
  • lack of universal assent IIs not known to
    idiots, children, illiterates (Bk I, ch. ii)
  • what was imprinted by Nature, as the Foundation
    and Guide of our Reason, should not need Reason
    to discover it (I, ii, 10)
  • Rejects dependence on authority emphasis on
    independent thought, of which Essay is itself an
    example (I, ii, 1)
  • Epistemological and political commitment to the
    individual (also foundation of political
    liberalism).

5
Lockes Ideas
  • Photographic-type images (Ideas) left in the
    mind by sense-impressions
  • primary qualities inhere in objects themselves
    (size, shape, number)
  • secondary qualities those we assign (color,
    taste, sound) to sense-impressions, e.g.
    vibration produces sound however, the sound we
    hear is not the vibration itself, but its effect
    on our hearing apparatus.

6
Role of language
  • Bk II new typology of things capable of being
    named or predicatedI.e. Ideas, not things
  • Words signs for Ideas imprecise language needs
    clarification, streamlining
  • Final goal to be able to speak with clarity
    about
  • Organizing natural things
  • Morality (mixed modes)
  • Existence of God (but not via the proof advanced
    by Descartes).

7
Rejects Aristotelian categories
  • all the great Business of Genera and Species
    and their Essences, amounts to no more than this,
    that Men making abstract Ideas, and settling them
    in their Minds, with names annexed to them, do
    thereby enable themselves to consider Things, and
    discourse of them, as it were in bundles, for
    the improvement, and communication of their
    Knowledge, which would advance but slowly, were
    their Words and Thoughts confined only to
    particulars (emph. original III, iii, 20).

8
Real vs Nominal Essence
  • So how are we going to sort things into kinds so
    that we may speak about them with mutual
    comprehension?
  • A name for a kind must excite in the name of the
    hearer the same Idea as it does in the mind of
    the speaker
  • The real essence of a chemical or kind of animal
    is not known (III, iii, 15)
  • Rather, only its nominal essence is, that is, our
    idea of it expressed in language, by one name for
    each kind of thing (vs. one name for each thing).

9
Effect of Lockes View
  • Skeptical tradition in biological systematics
    (taxonomy) of the reality of taxonomical
    divisions, e.g. of an alleged natural system of
    classification
  • Positive programme of improving classification
    schemes, not on the basis of a purported natural
    classification, but rather on an orderly system
    of nomenclature, such that one name stands for
    one thing.

10
Locke and Truth
  • Is there any universal truth for Locke?
  • Given that each of us has a separate and unique
    set of sense-experiences,
  • And there are no known real essences?
  • If not, then why does Locke talk about searches
    after Truth in the Epistle?
  • What Truth could he have in mind?

11
Next time Locke vs Bossuet
  • Origins of states
  • Role of kings in states
  • Govts accountability to people
  • Role of God
  • Absolute rule vs arbitrary rule
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