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6 - Governing conduct: Locke on the reform of thought and behaviour

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2009

James Tully
Affiliation:
McGill University, Montréal
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

This is a working chapter. The claims it embodies are provisional and tentative. The hypothesis laid out in the chapter is that a new practice of governing conduct was assembled in the period from the Reformation to the Enlightenment. My aim is to describe this ensemble of power, knowledge, and habitual behaviour at the point, 1660–1700, when its relatively enduring features consolidated, and from the perspective of one person who described, evaluated, and partly constructed it: John Locke. This mode of governance links together probabilistic and voluntaristic forms of knowledge with a range of techniques related to each other by a complex of references to juridical practices. Its aim is to reform conduct: to explain and then deconstruct settled ways of mental and physical behaviour, and to produce and then govern new forms of habitual conduct in belief and action. Finally, this way of subjection, of conducting the self and others, both posits and serves to bring about a very specific form of subjectivity: a subject who is calculating and calculable, from the perspective of the probabilistic knowledge and practices; and the sovereign bearer of rights and duties, subject to and of law from the voluntaristic perspective. The whole ensemble of knowledge, techniques, habitual activity, and subjection I will provisionally call the juridical government.

Aspects of this have been studied by Michael Foucault in Surveiller etpunir: naissance de la prison (1975).

Type
Chapter
Information
An Approach to Political Philosophy
Locke in Contexts
, pp. 179 - 241
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1993

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