Multiple times throughout John Locke’s piece, “An Essay
Concerning Human Understanding” I felt like he was trying to physically hammer
things into my head. For example, the statement, “If the signification of the
names of mixed modes be uncertain, because there be no real standards existing
in nature to which those ideas are referred, and by which they may be adjusted”
(Locke 820).
That statement seems awfully familiar to when Locke talks
about mixed modes:
“the names of mixed modes for the most part want standards in nature, whereby men may rectify and adjust their significations therefore they are very carious and doubtful. They are assemblages of ideas put together at the pleasure of the mind, pursuing it’s own ends of discourse, and suited to it’s own notions” (Locke 818).
The only real difference I can see between both statements
is that the first is an introduction regarding the different reasons why
substances are a doubtful significance. The second statement is helping explain
the seventh proposition. So in a way they’re the same thing but are serving
different functions. Granted, he’s expanding on all of the ideas that he
introduces in the beginning of the essay so he’s trying to really show what
he’s thinking and why. Even though the process is annoying to read, it is
incredibly effective. When I finished reading his piece, I remembered his ideas
and his reasoning behind them.