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On the Edge of Anarchy

Locke, Consent and the Limits of Society

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On the Edge of Anarchy completes A. John Simmons's exploration and development of Lockean moral and political philosophy, a project begun in The Lockean Theory of Rights (Princeton, 1992). In this new book, Simmons discusses the Lockean view of the nature of, grounds for, and limits on political relations between persons. Locke's ideas on this topic are probably the most influential in the history of political thought, but their philosophical virtues and implications have remained largely unappreciated. Here Simmons remedies this situation by treating Locke as a philosopher, rather than as a theologian or an activist writing rhetorical political tracts. Locke's works emerge not as episodes in the history of ideas but as bodies of arguments addressing the same questions as contemporary philosophy.
This book pursues the issues Locke raises far beyond the boundaries of his own texts and theories. By criticizing, streamlining, and developing Locke's views, Simmons elaborates a powerful Lockean political philosophy with strongly anarchistic implications. On the Edge of Anarchy will interest not only Locke specialists and political philosophers, but also students and professionals in philosophy, government, and law - and all others who are interested in the foundational political principles embraced and celebrated by Anglo-American societies.

List of Abbreviations
Acknowledgments
Introductionp. 3
Nonconsensual Relationsp. 11
The Lockean State of Naturep. 13
Locke's State of Naturep. 13
The Moral, Social, and Historical Dimensionsp. 23
The Point of State-of-Nature Storiesp. 33
Force and Rightp. 40
The State of Warp. 40
How Rights Are Lostp. 46
Despotism: Slavery and Absolute Governmentp. 48
Consent and Governmentp. 57
Political Consentp. 59
The Content of Lockean Consentp. 59
Consent, Contract, and Trustp. 68
The Appeal of Consent Theoryp. 72
The Varieties of Consentp. 80
Express and Tacit Consentp. 80
Majority Consentp. 90
The Limits of Societyp. 99
Inalienable Rightsp. 101
The Property of Inalienabilityp. 101
Locke on Inalienabilityp. 108
Locke's Commitmentsp. 119
Tolerationp. 123
Inalienability and Absolutismp. 137
Dissolution and Resistancep. 147
The Revolutionary Stancep. 147
The Right of Resistancep. 155
The Consequences of Dissolutionp. 167
The Duty to Resistp. 178
Consent and the Edge of Anarchyp. 193
The Critique of Lockean Consent Theoryp. 197
Hume's Attackp. 197
The Meaning of Consent in Lockep. 202
Consent, Obligation, and Anarchyp. 218
Consent and Votingp. 218
Consent and Residencep. 225
Duress, Hard Choices, and Free Choicep. 232
Lockean Anarchismp. 248
Works Citedp. 271
Indexp. 285
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved.

ISBN: 9780691033037
ISBN-10: 069103303X
Series: Studies in Moral, Political, and Legal Philosophy
Audience: Professional
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Number Of Pages: 306
Published: 1st August 1993
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Dimensions (cm): 24.3 x 16.2
Weight (kg): 0.62