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John Locke Unspoken Contract Essay

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Winder Perez
Hum3306
Option #1

The Unspoken/Unwritten contract of Mankind

Is there an unwritten rule or acknowledgement between mankind in which we have agreed to a disproportionate and unequal amount of earthly possessions? Or have we been coerced by our ancestors through rules and laws of society that have been forgotten through time? John Locke a rational and just man who usually battles his arguments with morals and logic speaks in his treatise chapter V about God. John Locke opens the chapter speaking about equality and that God gave the earth to the children of man therefore no one was granted more than the other. Locke took his stance on the appropriation of lands and earthly possessions. Locke proposed the theory of labor. Locke’s …show more content…

Claiming that it is acceptable to own more than one’s labor can service as long as that perishable is bartered for money (non-perishable). Like this, Locke realizes the unspoken contract between mankind. Indeed one can have a disproportionate and unequal possession of the earth by agreeing to use gold and silver. Since everyone agrees to use currency inequality becomes fair and just due to the fact that a man’s worth is determined by his labor. Locke believed that bartering for goods with money was presumably prejudiced, and voluntary because both sides would have something to gain. A famous saying “silence is consent” has also lead me to believe that throughout time some became more entitled to more than others. With a vast quantity of land per capita some found themselves acquiring more just because they could. Others allowed it therefore if it was accepted.

But many questions are still unanswered. If we can accumulate as much money without causing others poverty are those who are poor entitled to my money? According to Locke’s view if we did not cause that persons poverty we are not responsible for their suffering. A catch 22 indeed though we did not cause the persons suffering, it is the same that we did nothing to stop it. This is a question of ethics John Locke overlooked. It is a question of ethic though helping a person who is in need can be debatable, is helping a person who is condemned to death by hunger

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