“ For freedom, or not freedom, can belong to nothing but what has or has not a power to act. ”
John Locke, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1689). copy citation
Author | John Locke |
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Source | An Essay Concerning Human Understanding |
Topic | freedom power |
Date | 1689 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | |
Weblink | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/10615/10615-h/10615-h.htm |
Context
“it is the agent that has power, or is able to do. For powers are relations, not agents: and that which has the power or not the power to operate, is that alone which is or is not free, and not the power itself. For freedom, or not freedom, can belong to nothing but what has or has not a power to act.
20. Liberty belongs not to the Will.
The attributing to faculties that which belonged not to them, has given occasion to this way of talking: but the introducing into discourses concerning the mind, with the name of faculties, a notion of THEIR operating, has, I suppose, as little advanced our knowledge in that part of ourselves, as the great use and mention of the like invention of faculties, in the operations of the body, has helped us in the knowledge of physic.”
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