HTML: http://modernsource.daphnet.org/texts/Locke/LocHum,48[3]et49[1]
RDF: http://modernsource.daphnet.org/texts/Locke/LocHum,48[3]et49[1].rdf
— 49 —
General Assent the great
Argument.
§2. There is nothing more commonly
taken for granted, than
that there are certain Principles both
Speculative and
Practical (for
they speak of both)
universally agreed upon by all Mankind: which
therefore they argue, must needs be the
constant Impressions, which
the Souls of Men receive in their first Beings, and which they
bring
into the World with them, as necessarily and really as they do any
of their
inherent Faculties.
Locke Hum I, 2, §2, pp. 48-49