John Locke
John Locke was born at Wrington, a village in Somerset, on August
29, 1632. He was the son of a country solicitor and small landowner
who, when the civil war broke out, served as a captain of horse
in the parliamentary army. "I no sooner perceived myself in
the world than I found myself in a storm," he wrote long afterwards,
during the lull in the storm which followed the king's return. But
political unrest does not seem to have seriously disturbed the course
of his education. He entered Westminster school in 1646, and passed
to Christ Church, Oxford, as a junior student, in 1652; and he had
a home there (though absent from it for long periods) for more than
thirty years -- till deprived of his studentship by royal mandate
in 1684. The official studies of the university were uncongenial
to him; he would have preferred to have learned philosophy from
Descartes instead of from Aristotle; but evidently he satisfied
the authorities, for he was elected to a senior studentship in 1659,
and, in the three or four years following, he took part in the tutorial
work of the college. At one time he seems to have thought of the
clerical profession as a possible career; but he declined an offer
of preferment in 1666, and in the same year obtained a dispensation
which enabled him to hold his studentship without taking orders.
About the same time we hear of his interest in experimental science,
and he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1668. Little
is known of his early medical studies. He cannot have followed the
regular course, for he was unable to obtain the degree of doctor
of medicine. It was not till 1674 that he graduated as bachelor
of medicine. In the following January his position in Christ Church
was regularized by his appointment to one of the two medical studentships
of the college.
His knowledge of medicine and occasional practice of the art led,
in 1666, to an acquaintance with Lord Ashley (afterwards, from 1672,
Earl of Shaftesbury). The acquaintance, begun accidentally, had
an immediate effect on Locke's career. Without serving his connection
with Oxford, he became a member of Shaftesbury's household, and
seems soon to have been looked upon as indispensable in all matters
domestic and political. He saved the statesman's life by a skillful
operation, arranged a suitable marriage for his heir, attended the
lady in her confinement, and directed the nursing and education
of her son -- afterwards famous as the author of Characteristics.
He assisted Shaftesbury also in public business, commercial and
political, and followed him into the government service. When Shaftesbury
was made lord chancellor in 1672, Locke became his secretary for
presentations to benefices, and, in the following year, was made
secretary to the board of trade. In 1675 his official life came
to an end for the time with the fall of his chief.
Locke's health, always delicate, suffered from the London climate.
When released from the cares of office, he left England in search
of health. Ten years earlier he had his first experience of foreign
travel and of public employment, as secretary to Sir Walter Vane,
ambassador to the Elector of Brandenburg during the first Dutch
war. On his return to England, early in 1666, he declined an offer
of further service in Spain, and settled again in Oxford, but was
soon induced by Shaftesbury to spend a great part of his time in
London. On his release from office in 1675 he sought milder air
in the south of France, made leisurely journeys, and settled down
for many months at Montpellier. The journal which he kept at this
period is full of minute descriptions of places and customs and
institutions. It contains also a record of many of the reflections
that afterwards took shape in the Essay concerning Human Understanding.
he returned to England in 1679, when his patron had again a short
spell of office. He does not seem to have been concerned in Shaftesbury's
later schemes; but suspicion naturally fell upon him, and he found
it prudent to take refuge in Holland. This he did in August 1683,
less than a year after the flight and death of Shaftesbury. Even
in Holland for some time he was not safe from danger of arrest at
the instance of the English government; he moved from town to town,
lived under an assumed name, and visited his friends by stealth.
His residence in Holland brought political occupations with it,
among the men who were preparing the English revolution. it had
at least equal value in the leisure which it gave him for literary
work and in the friendships which it offered. In particular, he
formed a close intimacy with Philip van Limbroch, the leader of
the Remonstrant clergy, and the scholar and liberal theologian to
whom Epistola de Tolerantia was dedicated. This letter was completed
in 1685, though not published at the time; and, before he left for
England, in February 1689, the Essay concerning Human Understanding
seems to have attained its final form, and an abstract of it was
published in Leclerc's Bibliotheque universelle in 1688.
The new government recognized his services to the cause of freedom
by the offer of the post of ambassador either at Berlin or at Vienna.
But Locke was no place hunter; he was solicitous also on account
of his health; his earlier experience of Germany led him to fear
the "cold air" and "warm drinking"; and the
high office was declined. But he served less important offices at
home. He was made commissioner of appeals in May 1689, and, from
1696 to 1700, he was a commissioner of trade and plantations at
a salary of L1000 a year. Although official duties called him to
town for protracted periods, he was able to fix his residence in
the country. In 1691 he was persuaded to make his permanent home
at Oates in Essex, in the house of Francis and Lady Masham. Lady
Masham was a daughter of Cudworth, the Cambridge Platonist; Lock
had manifested a growing sympathy with his type of liberal theology;
intellectual affinity increased his friendship with the family at
Oates; and he continued to live with them till his death on October
28, 1704.
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