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  2. A Letter Concerning Toleration (Epistola de tolerantia) by John Locke was originally published in 1689. Its initial publication was in Latin, and it was immediately translated into other languages.

  3. A Letter Concerning Toleration is an important essay by the English philosopher John Locke, originally written in Latin in 1685, that greatly influenced the development of the modern concept of the separation of church and state.

  4. A Letter Concerning Toleration. Recommended edition: A Letter Concerning Toleration, ed. James Tully (Indianapolis: Hackett, 1983). Excerpt: I think indeed there is no nation under heaven, in which so much has already been said upon that subject, as ours.

  5. John Locke (1632-1704) was the author of A Letter Concerning Toleration (1689), An Essay concerning Human Understanding (1690), Two Treatises on Government (1690), and other works. In the period stretching from 1760 to 1800, his works on government and religious toleration made him, after Montesquieu and Blackstone, the most cited secular ...

  6. The English philosopher John Locke wrote his Letter on Toleration (1686) in Latin and sent it to a friend who published it. We reproduce here, unmodernised, William Popple’s 1689 English translation.

    • Caroline Warman
    • 2016
  7. Jun 5, 2012 · Summary. In the beginning of this letter, the author speaks of the ‘mutual toleration of Christians in their different professions of religion’. But toward the end of it he says: ‘if we may openly speak the truth, and as becomes one man to another, neither pagan, nor Muslim, nor Jew ought to be excluded from the civil rights of the ...

  8. By John Locke, gent. Author. Locke, John, 1632-1704. Publication. Boston, :: Printed and sold by Rogers and Fowle in Queen-Street, next to the prison., 1743. Rights/Permissions.

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