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Parsing M acpherson: The Last Rites of Locke the Possessive Individualist
Author(s) -
Breakey Hugh
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
theoria
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.34
H-Index - 16
eISSN - 1755-2567
pISSN - 0040-5825
DOI - 10.1111/theo.12022
Subject(s) - possessive , interpretation (philosophy) , philosophy , reading (process) , context (archaeology) , individualism , scholarship , literature , epistemology , linguistics , law , history , art , political science , archaeology
C . B . M acpherson's “ P ossessive I ndividualist” reading of Locke is one of the most radical and influential interpretations in the history of exegesis. Despite a substantial critical response over the past five decades, M acpherson's reading remains orthodox in various circles in the humanities generally, particularly in legal studies, and his interpretation of several crucial passages has unwittingly been followed even by his sharpest critics within L ockean scholarship. In order to present the definitive rebuttal to this interpretation, and so finally to lay it to rest, I argue that every one of M acpherson's key pieces of textual evidence can be rejected entirely on its own terms; that is, by reference to no more than its immediate context. In this way I contend that fault of the Possessive Individualist reading lies far deeper than mere cherry‐picking of the Lockean corpus, but centrally involves misreading, misplacing and misrepresenting the very parts of L ocke's work M acpherson cites as evidence for his reading.