An Essay Concerning Human Understanding (Wordsworth Classics of World Literature)
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1037796 in Books
- Published on: 1998-10-22
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 464 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
In this essay, Locke makes clear the routes by which philosophy was to develop as a study distinct from the natural sciences, and he argues for views on society, religion, language, education and progress that have subsequently become widely influential in the mainstream of European thought.
Customer Reviews
Full version
I won't go into the depths of Locke studies here. Suffice to say he was the first of the 'British Empiricists'; building on Descartes' ideas and beginning an epistemology that influenced Berkely, Hume and many others. The Essay is a (very) lengthy account of his ideas - in which he begins by denying the possibility of innate ideas and goes on to explain how we come by all our ideas, discussing on the way his influential ideas on personal identity and primary and secondary qualities.
If you want the best scholarly version, it's undoubtedly Nidditch's Clarendon Press one. This version doesn't offer so much in the way of notes; but it has a basic introduction, original spelling and IMPORTANT: is the cheapest unabridged version of the Essay I've come across.
Complete
I won't go into the depths of Locke studies here. Suffice to say he was the first of the 'British Empiricists'; building on Descartes' ideas and beginning an epistemology that influenced Berkely, Hume and many others. The Essay is a (very) lengthy account of his ideas - in which he begins by denying the possibility of innate ideas and goes on to explain how we come by all our ideas, discussing on the way his influential ideas on personal identity and primary and secondary qualities.
If you want the best scholarly version, it's undoubtedly this - Nidditch's Clarendon Press one, which has become the standard for academics. Granted, you can pick up an unabridged version for half as much (Penguin Classics). All this really has to offer is tons of extra notes - including biography and (very) full textual notes (most of which the average reader will NEVER need). All the same, it is the leading edition for study....
Warning: Abridged
I won't go into the depths of Locke studies here. Suffice to say he was the first of the 'British Empiricists'; building on Descartes' ideas and beginning an epistemology that influenced Berkely, Hume and many others. The Essay is a (very) lengthy account of his ideas - in which he begins by denying the possibility of innate ideas and goes on to explain how we come by all our ideas, discussing on the way his influential ideas on personal identity and primary and secondary qualities.
The problem that the essay has is that it's over-long (at about 800 pages) and filled with rambling repetition. Not actually amnaging to get through it all myself, I thought this abridged version might contain the highlights as it were... Well, if you have only a passing interest, this book is cheap and does set out Locke's main ideas without much repetition. For serious study, however, I'd invest a bit more for an unabridged copy (the cheapest I think is Penguin Classics; the best the one edited by Nidditch)




