ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1967. Locke's views in the field of education had great influence in the UK and abroad; and the aim of this book is to present them in the context of his general philosophical thinking, since it was mainly as a philosopher that Locke won his place in history. Because Locke was at the same time very much a man of affairs, and an interesting character on his own merits, the book gives a fairly full account of his life and times. Some attention is paid to his relations with the brilliant political adventurer, Lord Shaftesbury, without whom Locke's own career would have been very different, and might not have offered the opportunities which led to his writings on education.
The book seeks to emphasize the importance of Locke's empirical approach to truth - the method of modern science, without which the modern study of education, and the science of psychology in particular, would never have developed.

chapter

Introduction

part One|1 pages

John Locke and His World

chapter 1|3 pages

The Seventeenth Century in England

chapter 3|19 pages

John Locke, 1632—1704

part Two|1 pages

Locke’s Philosophy

chapter 5|12 pages

Locke’s Educational Thought

part Three|1 pages

Locke’s ‘Thoughts Concerning Education’

chapter 7|14 pages

General Principles of Education

chapter 8|9 pages

The Care of the Child

chapter 9|14 pages

Programme of Studies