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How Did John Locke Justify The American Revolution

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The “Enlightenment” lasted from 1687 to 1789. During this “Enlightenment” period of time, there was a“major intellectual movement”(Pavlac 228), where many schools of science spread their ideas. There were many prominent figures who associate with the Enlightenment’s four major conceptual views of empiricism, skepticism, humanitarianism, and progress. The Enlightenment’s four major concepts and its prominent figures justified the American and French revolutions, but one of the revolutions took the concepts to a greater extreme. John Locke was a prominent figure is the philosophy of empiricism. John Locke’s philosophy and the aftermath of the “Glorious Revolution” influenced the American and French revolutions. After the “Glorious Revolution” in 1688, the English …show more content…
Because in John Locke’s book when he states that “no one should be subjected to the political powers of another without their consent”, the colonists believed that this gave them a reason to break away from England. Later this became a part of the Declaration of Independence and core value in the United States government because the authors wrote, “Governments are instituted among men, deriving their power from the consent of the governed”(US 1776).
Many factors contributed to the start French revolution such as poor harvest and the country was on the verge of bankruptcy. One of the reasons that justified the French revolution was King Louis XVI heavy taxation on the middle class to pay off debt. This made people of France become angry and say this is unfair because the king was not taxing the royalty. This reason this gave the people of France a reason to revolt against their government, just like the Americans because John Locke believed “if a government does not do what is best for its people, the people have a right to

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