From there, John Locke took over the influences. For Locke, the State of Nature was also a “State of perfect Freedom… and of Equality” (Locke, pg. 269, para. 4). The land was held in common, and every man had the universal right to use whatever he needed as long as he was not wasteful with the resources. However, Locke asserted that this liberty was not license as there was a natural law, one superior to any form of human legislation, which reigned in the freedom of man (Locke, pg. 270, para. 6)…
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