THE END OF LAW
IS TO PRESERVE
AND ENLARGE
FREEDOM
JOHN LOCKE (1632–1704)
106 JOHN LOCKE
                                   A
                                             n important question in         by a government is that they
 IN CONTEXT                                  political theory concerns       expect the government to regulate
                                             the role of government and      disagreements and conflicts in
 IDEOLOGY
                                   the functions it should perform.          a neutral manner. Following
 Liberalism
                                   Equally important is the question         this logic, Locke was also able
 FOCUS                             of what gives the government              to describe the characteristics
 The rule of law                   a right to govern, and where the          of an illegitimate government.
                                   boundaries of government authority        It followed that a government that
 BEFORE                            should be. Some medieval scholars         did not respect and protect people’s
 1642 A series of conflicts        argued that kings had a right to          natural rights—or unnecessarily
 known as the English Civil        rule that had been bestowed upon          constrained their liberty—was not
 War breaks out, due to            them by God, while others                 legitimate. Locke was therefore
 concerns that Charles I           proclaimed that the nobility had          opposed to absolutist rule. Unlike
 would attempt to introduce        a birthright to rule. Enlightenment       his contemporary Thomas Hobbes,
 absolutism in England.            thinkers started to challenge these       who believed that an absolute
                                   doctrines. But if the power to rule       sovereign was required to save
 1661 Louis XIV begins his
                                   was not to be granted by divine           people from a brutal “state of
 personal rule of France, and      will or by birth, other sources of        nature,” Locke maintained that
 embodies absolutism in the        legitimacy had to be found.               the powers and functions of
 phrase “L’état, c’est moi,”           English philosopher John Locke        government had to be limited.
 saying that he is the state.      was the first to articulate the liberal
 AFTER                             principles of government: namely          The centrality of laws
 1689 The English Bill of          that the purpose of government            Much of Locke’s writing on political
 Rights secures the rights of      was to preserve its citizens’ rights      philosophy centered on rights and
 Parliament and elections free     to freedom, life, and property, to        laws. He defined political power
                                   pursue the public good; and to            as “a Right of making Laws with
 of royal interference.
                                   punish people who violated the            Penalties of Death,” He contended
 18th century Popular              rights of others. Lawmaking was           that one of the primary reasons
 revolutions in France             therefore the supreme function            why people would voluntarily leave
 and America lead to the           of government. For Locke, one of          the lawless state of nature was that
 establishment of republics        the main reasons people would             no independent judges existed in
 based on liberalist principles.   be willing to enter into a social         such a situation. It was preferable
                                   contract and submit to being ruled        to grant government a monopoly on
 John Locke                        John Locke lived in—and                   foundation for the Glorious
                                   shaped—one of the most                    Revolution of 1688, which
                                   transformative centuries in               transferred the balance
                                   English history. A series of civil        of power permanently from the
                                   wars pitted Protestants,                  king to Parliament. He promoted
                                   Anglicans, and Catholics against          the idea that people are not born
                                   each other, and power vacillated          with innate ideas, but with a
                                   between the king and the                  mind like a blank slate—a very
                                   Parliament. Locke was born in             modern way of viewing the self.
                                   1632 close to Bristol, England. He
                                   lived in exile in France and              Key works
                                   Holland for large periods of time
                                   due to suspicions that he was             1689 Two Treatises of Government
                                   involved in an assassination plot         1689 A Letter Concerning
                                   against King Charles II. His book         Toleration
                                   Two Treatises of Government               1690 An Essay Concerning Human
                                   provided the intellectual                 Understanding
                                                                   RATIONALITY AND ENLIGHTENMENT 107
See also: Thomas Hobbes 96–103    ■   Montesquieu 110–11   ■   Jean-Jacques Rousseau 118–25   ■   Thomas Jefferson 140–41   ■
Robert Nozick 326–27
      Humans are rational,                     They join political society              The end of law should
      independent agents                         to be protected by                      be to preserve and
        with natural rights.                        the rule of law.                      enlarge freedom.
violence and sentencing to ensure         live in freedom is not to live without    disputes in a neutral way. Locke
fair rule of law. Moreover, for Locke,    laws in the state of nature. Locke        writes that “men living according
a legitimate government upholds           points out that “freedom is not, as       to reason, without a common
the principle of separation of the        we are told, liberty for every man        superior on Earth to judge
legislative and executive powers.         to do what he lists (for who could        between them, is properly
The legislative power is superior         be free when every other man’s            the state of nature.”
to the executive—the former               humor might domineer over him?),              Unlike Hobbes, Locke does
has supreme power to establish            but a liberty to dispose, and order       not equate the state of nature with
general rules in the affairs of           as he lists, his person, actions,         war. A state of war is a situation
government, while the latter              possessions, and his whole                in which people do not uphold
is only responsible for enforcing         property, within the allowance            natural law, or the law of reason
the law in specific cases.                of those laws.” In other words,           as Locke calls it. Where Hobbes
    One reason for the centrality         laws can not only preserve, but           would see human beings acting
of laws in Locke’s writings is that       also enable liberty to be exercised.      as “power maximizers,” mainly
laws protect liberty. The purpose of      Without laws, our freedom would be        concerned with self-preservation,
law is not to abolish or restrain, but    limited by an anarchical, uncertain       Locke finds that people can act
to preserve and enlarge freedom.          state of nature, and in practice          according to reason and with
In political society, Locke believes      there may be no freedom at all.           tolerance in the state of nature.
that “where there is no law there is                                                Conflicts are therefore not
no freedom.” Laws, therefore, both        Man’s initial condition                   necessarily common in a state
constrain and enable freedom. To          Locke says that laws should be            of nature. However, when ❯❯
                                          designed—and enforced—with
                                          man’s initial condition and nature
                                          in mind. Like most social contract
                                          theorists, he considers men to
                                          be equal, free, and independent.
                                          According to Locke, the state of
   In all the states of created           nature is a situation in which
     beings capable of law,               people coexist, often in relative
     where there is no law,               harmony, but there is no legitimate
      there is no freedom.                political power or judge to settle
           John Locke
                                          Opposed to absolutist rule, Locke
                                          as a child had witnessed the execution
                                          of King Charles I in 1649 for being “a
                                          tyrant, traitor, murderer, and public
                                          enemy to the good of this nation.”
108 JOHN LOCKE
                                    The Role Of Government
      Governments must craft             …that protect the rights                 …and enforce them with
           good laws…                        of the people…                        the public good in mind.
population density increases,       the legitimate role of government,         powerful figure would limit
resources become scarce, and        based on an understanding of               individual freedom unnecessarily.
the introduction of money leads     the human state of nature.                 For Locke, total subordination
to economic inequality, conflicts       Locke agrees with Hobbes that          was dangerous. He wrote: “I have
increase, and human society         a legitimate government is based           reason to conclude that he who
begins to need laws, regulators,    on a social contract between               would get me into his power
and judges to settle disputes in    individuals in a society. The              without my consent would use
an objective manner.                problem with the state of nature           me as he pleased when he got me
                                    is that there are no judges or police      there, and destroy me too when he
The purpose of government           to enforce the law. People are             had a fancy to it; for nobody can
The question of legitimacy was      willing to enter civil society in          desire to have me in his absolute
at the heart of Locke’s political   order for government to take up this       power unless it be to compel me
thinking. Following the example     role. This is, therefore, a legitimate     by force to that which is against
of Hobbes, he sought to deduce      role for government. Another               the right of my freedom, i.e., make
                                    important aspect of legitimate             me a slave.”
                                    government is rule by consent                  Rather, Locke favors a limited
                                    of the people. For Locke, this did         role for government. Government
                                    not have to mean democracy—a               should protect people’s private
                                    majority of people could reasonably        property, keep the peace, secure
                                    decide that a monarch, aristocracy,        public commodities for the whole
                                    or a democratic assembly should            people, and as far as possible,
                                    rule. The important point was              protect citizens against foreign
                                    that the people granted the right          invasions. For Locke, “This is the
                                    to rule, and were entitled to take         original, this is the use, and these
                                    back this privilege.                       are the bounds of the legislative
                                        Locke argued against a strong,         (which is the supreme) power
                                    absolutist sovereign—as advocated          in every commonwealth.” The
                                    by Thomas Hobbes—since such a              purpose of government is to
                                                                               do what is missing in the state
                                                                               of nature to ensure people’s
                                    The English Bill of Rights, ratified
                                    by King William III in 1689, established   freedom and prosperity. There is
                                    limits on the king’s power, conforming     no need to enslave people under
                                    with Locke’s contention that a monarch     absolute rule. The primary function
                                    only rules by the consent of the people.   of government is to craft good laws
                                                               RATIONALITY AND ENLIGHTENMENT 109
to protect people’s rights, and          France and North America near
to enforce those laws with the           the end of the 18th century were
public good in mind.                     founded on liberal ideas. In fact,
                                         Thomas Jefferson, one of the
The right to revolt                      architects of the American
Locke’s distinction between              Constitution and the Declaration              A Bill of Rights is
legitimate and illegitimate              of Independence, revered Locke,
                                                                                     what the people are
governments also carries with            and used many of his phrases in
it the idea that opposition to           the founding documents. The
                                                                                   entitled to against every
illegitimate rule is acceptable.         emphasis on protection of “life,
                                                                                  government, and what no
Locke describes a range of               liberty, or property” found in the    just government should refuse,
scenarios in which people would          Bill of Rights in the Constitution,         or rest on inference.
have a right to revolt in order to       and the inalienable rights to              Thomas Jefferson
take back the power they had             “Life, Liberty, and the pursuit
given the government. For example,       of Happiness” in the Declaration
people can legitimately rebel if:        can all be traced directly back
elected representatives of the           to John Locke’s philosophy a
people are prevented from                century earlier. ■
assembly; foreign powers are
bestowed with authority over
people; the election system or
procedures are changed without
public consent; the rule of law is
not upheld; or the government
seeks to deprive people of their
rights. Locke regarded illegitimate
rule as tantamount to slavery.
He even went as far as to condone
regicide—the execution of a
monarch—in circumstances where
the monarch has broken the social
contract with his people. As the
son of Puritans who had supported
the Parliamentarian cause in the
English Civil War, this was no
mere theoretical concern—Locke’s
writing gives a clear justification
for the execution of Charles I.
Locke’s legacy
The political philosophy of John
Locke has, since his time, become
known as “liberalism”—the belief
in the principles of liberty and
equality. The revolutions in
For a government to be legitimate,
according to Locke, assemblies of
elected representatives of the people,
such as the House of Commons, must
be allowed to meet and debate.