The state of nature is a concept of philosophy used in religion, cultural, and socio-economic terms to demonstrate the conditions of what the lives of people might have been like before societies came into existence. When identifying this on a general level, the state of nature is the predicaments in which humans interacted and how they react to those situations of ethical and moral grounds. The importance behind this theory is very impactful. The state of nature is identifiable within a situation without government, employed in social contract theory in order to justify political authority. This, in a sense, puts the people of society in line. In a fascinating way, the state of nature suppresses people to a certain degree that questioning …show more content…
Within Locke’s social structure, people can disagree about which is true in regards to religion, race or politics without necessarily being in the grip of some fanatical ideology. However, while this might help convince the reader that government does not violate natural law by suppressing dangerous opinions, it does nothing to establish that such suppression can be affective. Locke’s own arguments inflict devastating damage upon any claim that suppression of opinions work. So in the same time in which Lock demonstrates a form of suppression, he knows that this form of suppression will simply not work for a mass group of individuals. When looking at it through a morale lens, it is clear that Locke’s assumptions of suppression are alive and evident. He sates, “We are like chameleons, we take our hue and the color of our moral character, from those who are around us” (Locke 245). The key word sin this statement is “from those who are around us. The reasoning behind this is because in order to enact a suppressive environment, society must be on the same line religiously, psychological, and most importantly, politically. From a Lockean point of view, this is evident in each and every society known to man. Within the suppressive concept in both cases, come dangers to human