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Two Treatises of Civil Government

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

(4,316 Sterne; 57 Bewertungen)

The Two Treatises of Civil Government is a work of political philosophy published anonymously in 1689 by John Locke. The First Treatise is an extended attack on Sir Robert Filmer's Patriarcha, which argued for a divinely-ordained, hereditary, absolute monarchy. The more influential Second Treatise outlines a theory of civil society based on natural rights and contract theory. Locke begins by describing the "state of nature," and goes on to explain the hypothetical rise of property and civilization, asserting that the only legitimate governments are those which have the consent of the people.

Locke's ideas heavily influenced both the American and French Revolutions. His notions of people's rights and the role of civil government provided strong support for the intellectual movements of both revolutions. (Summary adapted from Wikipedia) (11 hr 4 min)

Chapters

00 - Preface

5:56

Read by Philippa

01 - Book I, Chapter 01

6:25

Read by Philippa

02 - Book I, Chapter 02: Of Paternal and Regal Power

18:48

Read by Philippa

03 - Book I, Chapter 03: Of Adam's Title to Sovereignty by Creation

12:49

Read by Philippa

04 - Book I, Chapter 04: Of Adam’s Title to Sovereignty By Donation, Gen. I. 28

39:11

Read by Philippa

05 - Book I, Chapter 05: Of Adam’s Title to Sovereignty By the Subjection of Eve

12:32

Read by Philippa

06 - Book I, Chapter 06: Of Adam’s Title to Sovereignty By Fatherhood

44:43

Read by Philippa

07 - Book I, Chapter 07: Of Fatherhood and Property Considered Together As Foun…

12:01

Read by Philippa

08 - Book I, Chapter 08: Of the Conveyance of Adam’s Sovereign Monarchical Power

6:07

Read by Philippa

09 - Book I, Chapter 09: Of Monarchy, By Inheritance from Adam

33:27

Read by Philippa

10 - Book I, Chapter 10: Of the Heir to Adam’s Monarchical Power

5:07

Read by Philippa

11 - Book I, Chapter 11: Who Heir? part 1

23:33

Read by Philippa

12 - Book I, Chapter 11: Who Heir? part 2

18:38

Read by Philippa

13 - Book I, Chapter 11: Who Heir? part 3

36:36

Read by Philippa

14 - Book I, Chapter 11: Who Heir? part 4

32:08

Read by Philippa

15 - Book II, Chapter 01

4:16

Read by D.E. Wittkower

16 - Book II, Chapter 02: Of the State of Nature

21:22

Read by D.E. Wittkower

17 - Book II, Chapter 03: Of the State of War

10:46

Read by D.E. Wittkower

18 - Book II, Chapter 04: Of Slavery

5:07

Read by D.E. Wittkower

19 - Book II, Chapter 05: Of Property

45:17

Read by D.E. Wittkower

20 - Book II, Chapter 06: Of Paternal Power

33:34

Read by Anna Simon

21 - Book II, Chapter 07: Of Political or Civil Society

28:10

Read by Nikki Sullivan

22 - Book II, Chapter 08: Of the Beginning of Political Societies

38:24

Read by Anna Simon

23 - Book II, Chapter 09: Of the Ends of Political Society and Government

7:18

Read by Sibella Denton

24 - Book II, Chapter 10: Of the Forms of a Common-wealth

2:43

Read by Sibella Denton

25 - Book II, Chapter 11: Of the Extent of the Legislative Power

21:27

Read by Jc Guan

26 - Book II, Chapter 12: Of the Legislative, Executive, and Federative Power o…

7:08

Read by Ashwin Jain

27 - Book II, Chapter 13: Of the Subordination of the Powers of the Common-weal…

22:41

Read by Ashwin Jain

28 - Book II, Chapter 14: Of Prerogative

18:09

Read by Ashwin Jain

29 - Book II, Chapter 15: Of Paternal, Political, and Despotical Power, Conside…

7:09

Read by Sibella Denton

30 - Book II, Chapter 16: Of Conquest

25:04

Read by Sibella Denton

31 - Book II, Chapter 17: Of Usurpation

2:21

Read by Sibella Denton

32 - Book II, Chapter 18: Of Tyranny

13:57

Read by Sibella Denton

33 - Book II, Chapter 19: Of the Dissolution of Government

41:11

Read by Sibella Denton

Bewertungen

Prescient

(5 Sterne)

All but one of the readers are fantastic. I feel robbed for not having been exposed to this information at an early age. It makes all the reasons for western civilization bare. And it arms us to recognize the wolves in sheep's clothing who want to take away our rights and disregard the law of nature. Each child should have to memorize chapter 19 of Book 2 before graduating high school.

Please disregard previous review

(5 Sterne)

This is an exemplary reading of a philosophical text. The first reader has a clear, beautifully modulated voice with excellent enunciation. The recording quality is fine. The text is delivered at exactly the sort of speed needed to convey the ideas, and the reader evidently understands fully everything she narrates. The subsequent readers also are fully competent. To give this audiobook a "lowest" rating is absurd. Time-wasters like the previous reviewer are stupidly abusive and I only hope that the readers are not affected in the slightest by such inconsiderate rubbish and will go on using their own free time to give us superb productions like this.

Joining in on Booing PhilyFlowers off the stage

(4 Sterne)

This is a very good community reading, and while one person didn't live up to PhilyFlower's high standards for receiving free-volunteered material, no one does a bad job, at all.

A must read

(4 Sterne)

I highly recommend this writing to any student of government or liberty. Most recording are good, but one reader was slow and another hard to understand at times with his accent.

ok reading

(3 Sterne)

some of the chapters are pretty tough to understand what the person is saying

(4 Sterne)

It was really good up until the part where the dude from India started reading.

brilliant and as relevant today as when written!

(5 Sterne)

well read as well. Thank you.

great reading

(5 Sterne)

This was a really good reading, especially the first treatise. Thanks.