Wrangling about Innate Ideas? Reflections on Locke and Cudworth

Locke contended that knowledge is learned from experience, taught from without rather than innately known from within. The notion of innate ideas has since been seen by many as innately ridiculous, as a battle long ago waged and won in the first book of Locke’s <i>Essay Concerning Human Unders...

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Main Author: Jonathan David Lyonhart
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2023-03-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/14/3/404
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author Jonathan David Lyonhart
author_facet Jonathan David Lyonhart
author_sort Jonathan David Lyonhart
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description Locke contended that knowledge is learned from experience, taught from without rather than innately known from within. The notion of innate ideas has since been seen by many as innately ridiculous, as a battle long ago waged and won in the first book of Locke’s <i>Essay Concerning Human Understanding</i>. However, there was no fight in the first place, for the most comprehensive defence of innate ideas in the 17th century was not published until the 18th century. Ralph Cudworth’s <i>Treatise Concerning Eternal and Immutable Morality</i> was published posthumously nearly fifty years after its writing, and while Locke and Cudworth wrote on similar subjects—and around the same time and place—the fates never aligned for them to meet and ‘have it out’. This paper places Locke and Cudworth into conversation on this question of innate ideas. Such analysis will reveal that Cudworth sidestepped much of Locke’s critique by hanging his argument not on universal consent but on the Platonic principle of like-knows-like. In the process, Cudworth anticipated many of the responses to Locke that would come in the next century from Berkeley, Hume, and Kant. Thus, his forgotten role in this narrative in the history of philosophy cries out for reappraisal, along with the renewed insights he might bring to the on-going contemporary discussion.
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spelling doaj.art-049420c3f1ef49ad82fc601c97b1a9532023-11-17T13:37:11ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442023-03-0114340410.3390/rel14030404Wrangling about Innate Ideas? Reflections on Locke and CudworthJonathan David Lyonhart0Theology and Philosophy Department, Lincoln Christian University, Lincoln, IL 62656, USALocke contended that knowledge is learned from experience, taught from without rather than innately known from within. The notion of innate ideas has since been seen by many as innately ridiculous, as a battle long ago waged and won in the first book of Locke’s <i>Essay Concerning Human Understanding</i>. However, there was no fight in the first place, for the most comprehensive defence of innate ideas in the 17th century was not published until the 18th century. Ralph Cudworth’s <i>Treatise Concerning Eternal and Immutable Morality</i> was published posthumously nearly fifty years after its writing, and while Locke and Cudworth wrote on similar subjects—and around the same time and place—the fates never aligned for them to meet and ‘have it out’. This paper places Locke and Cudworth into conversation on this question of innate ideas. Such analysis will reveal that Cudworth sidestepped much of Locke’s critique by hanging his argument not on universal consent but on the Platonic principle of like-knows-like. In the process, Cudworth anticipated many of the responses to Locke that would come in the next century from Berkeley, Hume, and Kant. Thus, his forgotten role in this narrative in the history of philosophy cries out for reappraisal, along with the renewed insights he might bring to the on-going contemporary discussion.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/14/3/404John LockeRalph Cudworthinnate ideasempiricismepistemologyearly modern philosophy
spellingShingle Jonathan David Lyonhart
Wrangling about Innate Ideas? Reflections on Locke and Cudworth
Religions
John Locke
Ralph Cudworth
innate ideas
empiricism
epistemology
early modern philosophy
title Wrangling about Innate Ideas? Reflections on Locke and Cudworth
title_full Wrangling about Innate Ideas? Reflections on Locke and Cudworth
title_fullStr Wrangling about Innate Ideas? Reflections on Locke and Cudworth
title_full_unstemmed Wrangling about Innate Ideas? Reflections on Locke and Cudworth
title_short Wrangling about Innate Ideas? Reflections on Locke and Cudworth
title_sort wrangling about innate ideas reflections on locke and cudworth
topic John Locke
Ralph Cudworth
innate ideas
empiricism
epistemology
early modern philosophy
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/14/3/404
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