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John Wesley's Indebtedness to John Norris

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

John C. English
Affiliation:
Professor of history in Baker University, Baldwin City, Kansas.

Extract

Several scholars, including Workman, Cragg, Dreyer, and now Henry Rack, have called attention to Wesley's endorsement of Locke's philosophy (within limits) and, more broadly, to the debt which he owed to empiricist psychology and theories of knowledge. Wesley read the Essay Concerning Human Understanding in 1725 during the interval between his commencement as a Bachelor of Arts and his election to a Fellowship at Lincoln College, Oxford. The book made a favorable impression which endured to the end of his life. During the decade of the eighties, for instance, Wesley published a series of extracts from the Essay, books I and II, in his Arminian Magazine (volumes 5–7, 1782–1784). He also praised The Procedure, Extent, and Limits of Human Understanding and Things Divine and Supernatural Conceived by Analogy with Things Natural and Divine, books written by Peter Browne (died 1735), an Irish bishop and philosopher whom Locke had influenced to a considerable degree. Indeed, at one juncture, Wesley expressed a preference for Browne over Locke. He wrote in his journal for 6 December 1756, “I began reading to our preachers the late Bishop of Cork's Treatise on Human Understanding, in most points far clearer and more judicious than Mr. Locke's, as well as designed to advance a better cause.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 1991

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References

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44. As Alexander Knox summarized it so neatly, Remains of Alexander Knox, 4 vols., 2nd ed. (London, 18361837), 3: 154.Google Scholar

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59. Norris agreed that the “new” science might produce valuable results in the future but in his judgment it had not advanced very far as yet (Reflections, p. 82).

60. Norris, , Reflections, p. 143.Google Scholar

61. See, for instance, the correspondence between Newton, and Bentley, Richard, Isaac Newton's Papers and Letters on Natural Philosophy and Related Documents, ed. Cohen, I. B., 2nd ed. (Cambridge, Mass., 1978), pp. 279394;Google ScholarGillespie, N. C., “Natural History, Natural Theology, and Social Order: John Ray and the ‘Newtonian Ideology,’” Journal of the History of Biology 20 (1987): 149.CrossRefGoogle Scholar