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12 - Locke, Willis, and the seventeenth-century Epicurean soul

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 November 2009

Margaret J. Osler
Affiliation:
University of Calgary
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Summary

In recent years, historians of early modern thought have raised questions concerning the relation of the philosophy of John Locke to the seventeenth-century Epicurean revival instituted by Pierre Gassendi. While many have seen a strong element of Cartesianism in Locke's thought, some of these historians have argued that the main thrust of his philosophy should be understood in the context of this seventeenth-century Epicureanism. One of the most central, and at the same time puzzling concepts in Locke's Essay Concerning Human Understanding is the concept of soul. While Locke never gave a definitive account of the soul, he did present two hypotheses relating to the “essence” of the soul which were important in contemporary disputes and later philosophical developments. In this chapter I shall suggest that these hypotheses represent Locke's own modifications of a seventeenth-century Epicurean account of the soul. Moreover, I shall argue that two major themes concerning the soul in the Essay have roots in this philosophy.

The best-known of Locke's hypotheses was put forward in Book 4 of the Essay. Throughout much of the Essay Locke wrote about the soul from a Cartesian perspective – apparently the perspective of much of his audience. For example, in the chapter of the Essay in which he discussed personal identity, Locke wrote that he was “taking, as we ordinarily now do, … the Soul of a Man, for an immaterial Substance, independent from Matter.” As such it is conceivable that it can be united to different bodies at different times.

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Atoms, Pneuma, and Tranquillity
Epicurean and Stoic Themes in European Thought
, pp. 239 - 258
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1991

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