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John Locke : The Father Of Classical Liberalism

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Ideologies are often born out of a minority view conceived upon a critique on the functioning of the current state of society and epoch. These ideologies each contain specific and unique ideas and beliefs that are never universally accepted, for if they were no other form of ideology would ever manifest. Liberalism is perhaps one of the most commonly accepted political ideologies that frequents present society; this ideology revolves around individual freedoms and equality under our current capitalistic economic relations. John Locke is often noted as the father of classical liberalism – of which other forms of liberalism came from – due to his influential works in favour of ideas that reflect what is now known as liberalism. Alongside …show more content…

Firstly, the concept of common property refers to land, resources, buildings, etc., that can be used by anyone, and that one has the right from exclusion of said property; under both liberal and socialist systems these kinds of properties exist (such as roads, parks, beaches). State property refers to land, resources, buildings, etc., that the state decides who can make use of (such as state libraries, postal services, or land for potential development), again, both ideologies believe in the retainment of this (an exception may be extended to some branches of socialism/communism, like anarcho-communism, which advocates the abolition of the state entirely). The divide of property rights between socialism and liberalism arises once we reach the concept of private property, this will be the main focus of this essay in comparing and contrasting liberalism and socialism. Private property arouse out of the changing social system from feudalism to capitalism. C.B Macpherson (1973) regarded private property as the right of an individual or institution to exclude others from using or benefitting from something, such as land, resources, buildings, or machines. Of course, many different proponents of liberalism and socialism have differing conceptions on how private property should or should not exist. As such, this essay will attempt to compare, contrast, and evaluate the differing ideas and evolution of both

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