John Locke When you think of important and influential philosophers it rarely gets bigger than John Locke especially in with contributors within the modern era. John Locked lived in England from 1632 to his death in 1704, however is contributions in the world is felt to this day. John Locke was a huge influence in the Age of Enlightenment and with the Constitution of the United States. He was an early thinker of modern empiricism and a huge influence in political liberalism. With his two huge works the Two Treatises of Government and An Essay Concerning Human Understanding he revolutionized political philosophy and set out to state that we obtain ideas though our experiences in the world. With this paper I will analyze the ideas and philosophies that John Locke presented and discuss them. …show more content…
John Locke was born to a well off family, though not a very particularly high politically or economically, in southwestern England. When he was 14 years John Locke, who was seen as someone who could survive the academics, he was sent to the prestigious Westminster School. At this school he learned Latin, Greek, Hebrew, mathematics and geography. Going to this school was important in his early thinking, as it was a foundation for his thinking on how he hated schooling. He later advanced to the school of Christ Church of Oxford University. Locke while always an excellent student found that the curriculum at this school to boring and unstimulating. To him the school wasn’t advancing with the times, rather it was stuck in the past with the curriculum. To him they focused too much on Aristotle and ignored the new ideas that were going though such as Francis Bacon and Rene Descartes and their approach on ideas about nature and origins of