The saga of Donovan Creed's ancestors continues in Emmett & Gentry, the third book in the Emmett Love western adventure series. Still in chains after serving twenty-eight months for a crime he didn't commit, former gunslinger and sheriff, Emmett Love, heads to Dodge City to find Gentry, the love of his life. What he finds instead is a ghost town, ravaged by the Civil War, and ten town widows who are determined to make him forget about his sweetheart.
The saga of Donovan Creed's ancestors continues in Emmett & Gentry, the third book in the Emmett Love western adventure series. Still in chains after ...
An Unabridged Edition To Include Both Book One (The False Principles And Foundation Of Sir Robert Filmer And His Followers Are Detected And Overthrown) And Book Two (An Essay Concerning The True Original Extent And End Of Civil Government) to include all footnotes with a preface by the author.
An Unabridged Edition To Include Both Book One (The False Principles And Foundation Of Sir Robert Filmer And His Followers Are Detected And Overthrown...
Who among us hasn't eavesdropped on a stranger's conversation in a theater or restaurant? Indeed, scientists have found that even animals eavesdrop on the calls and cries of others. In Eavesdropping, John L. Locke provides the first serious look at this virtually universal phenomenon. Locke's entertaining and disturbing account explores everything from sixteenth-century voyeurism to Hitchcock's "Rear Window"; from chimpanzee behavior to Parisian cafe society; from private eyes to Facebook and Twitter. He uncovers the biological drive behind the behavior and highlights its consequences across...
Who among us hasn't eavesdropped on a stranger's conversation in a theater or restaurant? Indeed, scientists have found that even animals eavesdrop on...
John Locke's classic work An Essay Concerning Human Understanding laid the foundation of British empiricism and remains of enduring interest today. Rejecting doctrines of innate principles and ideas, Locke shows how all our ideas, even the most abstract and complex, are grounded in human experience--attained by sensation of external things or reflection upon our mental activities. A thorough examination of the communication of ideas through language and the convention of taking words as signs of ideas paves the way for his penetrating critique of the limitations of ideas and the extent of our...
John Locke's classic work An Essay Concerning Human Understanding laid the foundation of British empiricism and remains of enduring interest today. Re...
John Locke's "Second Treatise of Government" (c. 1681) is perhaps the key founding liberal text. "A Letter Concerning Toleration," written in 1685 (a year when a Catholic monarch came to the throne of England and Louis XVI unleashed a reign of terror against Protestants in France), is a classic defense of religious freedom. Yet many of Locke's other writings--not least the Constitutions of Carolina, which he helped draft--are almost defiantly anti-liberal in outlook.
This comprehensive collection brings together the main published works (excluding polemical attacks on other people's...
John Locke's "Second Treatise of Government" (c. 1681) is perhaps the key founding liberal text. "A Letter Concerning Toleration," written in 1685 ...
The "Second Treatise" is one of the most important political treatises ever written and one of the most far-reaching in its influence.
In his provocative 15-page introduction to this edition, the late eminent political theorist C. B. Macpherson examines Locke's arguments for limited, conditional government, private property, and right of revolution and suggests reasons for the appeal of these arguments in Locke's time and since.
The "Second Treatise" is one of the most important political treatises ever written and one of the most far-reaching in its influence.
John Locke's subtle and influential defense of religious toleration as argued in his seminal "Letter Concerning Toleration" (1685) appears in this edition as introduced by one of our most distinguished political theorists and historians of political thought.
John Locke's subtle and influential defense of religious toleration as argued in his seminal "Letter Concerning Toleration" (1685) appears in this ...