Want this question answered?
The enlightenment concept that was represented by John Locke was that government should have limited powers. He did believe that the government should protect natural rights.
The English philosopher john Locke (1632-1704) believed that all people had rights that no government could take away. He expressed three of them as "life, liberty, and property." He believed that government should be run by the governed for their benefit.
John Locke believed that people could be trusted to govern. He believed that people had the right to life, liberty, and property. He said that people should have a word in who should be governing them !
John Locke believed that people should set up a new government when the existing government fails to protect their natural rights, namely life, liberty, and property. He argued that when a government violates these rights, people have the right to rebel and form a new government that will secure and protect their rights.
Locke believed that the government existed to prevent the state of nature from happening
The enlightenment concept that was represented by John Locke was that government should have limited powers. He did believe that the government should protect natural rights.
no
john Locke
john Locke did not believe government should take away the rights of life, liberty, and property.
john Locke believed the best form of government was democracy.
john Locke did not believe government should take away the rights of life, liberty, and property.
john Locke
John Locke believed that all people had rights that no government could take away. John Locke expressed this in 3 ways life, liberty and property.
John Locke didn't believe in any religion. He was a philosopher and a writer who believed that a good government is based on a social contract between the people and the rulers.
Which philosopher shared john Locke's belief that the executive and legislative branches of government should be separate?
john Locke believed that all people had rights that no government could take away. John Locke expressed this in 3 ways life, liberty and property.
life liberty and the right to own property.