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Summary Political Theory from Hobbes (PO201) - Locke

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LOCKE REVISION

• What is the difference between tacit and express consent?
Tacit consent = consent not physically expressed by an individual, rather than
by benefiting from any part of a state or authority, they are consenting to be
subject to the rules and laws that the state has whilst living in the territory –
obeying that government without delivering 'any expressions of it at all'
(Locke, Two Treaties of Governments, 119)
Express consent =
• How does a person acquire an obligation to obey the law?

• How does one obtain a legitimate right to property?

• What is the Lockean proviso in property acquisition?


• When can the people remove the government?

• The relationship between Locke’s theory of property acquisition and equality

• What are the limitations of Locke’s theory of property?

• Can tacit consent ground any obligations?

• What conditions must be met for a person to have ‘tacitly’ consented?
-Walking down the road
----Simmons finds it difficult to see how merely walking on a street or inheriting land can
be thought of as an example of a “deliberate, voluntary alienating of rights” (Simmons
1993, 69). It is one thing, he argues, for a person to consent by actions rather than words;
it is quite another to claim a person has consented without being aware that they have
done so. To require a person to leave behind all of their property and emigrate in order to
avoid giving tacit consent is to create a situation where continued residence is not a free
and voluntary choice.

• Does Locke successfully demonstrate that political obligation rests on consent?

• Should Locke have put more restrictions on when people can rebel?

Scholars:
Tacit Consent
- Locke's account for tacit consent is problematic and appears somewhat 'watering down' of
the idea of consent (Pitkin,1965).
-Not convincing in terms of how a state gets its authority (Wellman 2001)
- tacit consent legitimates and obligates authority under conditions in which there is duly
constituted authority (Christiano, Authority in Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy, 2020).

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