CHAPTER XV. OF PATERNAL, POLITICAL, AND DESPOTICAL POWER, CONSIDERED TOGETHER.
Sect. 169.
THOUGH
I
have
had
occasion
to
speak
of
these
separately
before,
yet
the
great
mistakes
of
late
about
government, having,
as
I suppose, arisen
from
confounding
these
distinct
powers
one
with
another,
it
may
not, perhaps,
be
amiss
to
consider
them
here
together. Sect. 170. First, then,
Paternal
or
parental
power
is
nothing
but
that
which
parents
have
over
their
children,
to
govern
them
for
the
children's good,
till
they
come
to
the
use
of
reason,
or
a
state
of
knowledge,
wherein
they
may
be
supposed
capable
to
understand
that
rule,
whether
it
be
the
law
of
nature,
or
the
municipal
law
of
their
country,
they
are
to
govern
themselves
by: capable, I say,
to
know
it,
as
well
as
several
others,
who
live
as
freemen
under
that
law.
The
affection
and
tenderness
which
God
hath
planted
in
the
breast
of
parents
towards
their
children,
makes
it
evident,
that
this
is
not
intended
to
be
a
severe
arbitrary
government,
but
only
for
the
help, instruction,
and
preservation
of
their
offspring.
But
happen
it
as
it
will,
there
is,
as
I
have
proved,
no
reason
why
it
should
be
thought
to
extend
to
life
and
death,
at
any
time,
over
their
children,
more
than
over
any
body
else;
neither
can
there
be
any
pretence
why
this
parental
power
should
keep
the
child,
when
grown
to
a man,
in
subjection
to
the
will
of
his
parents,
any
farther
than
having
received
life
and
education
from
his
parents,
obliges
him
to
respect, honour, gratitude,
assistance
and
support,
all
his
life,
to
both
father
and
mother.
And
thus, 'tis true,
the
paternal
is
a
natural
government,
but
not
at
all
extending
itself
to
the
ends
and
jurisdictions
of
that
which
is
political.
The
power
of
the
father doth
not
reach
at
all
to
the
property
of
the
child,
which
is
only
in
his
own
disposing. Sect. 171. Secondly,
Political
power
is
that
power,
which
every
man
having
in
the
state
of
nature, has
given
up
into
the
hands
of
the
society,
and
therein
to
the
governors,
whom
the
society
hath
set
over
itself,
with
this
express
or
tacit
trust,
that
it
shall
be
employed
for
their
good,
and
the
preservation
of
their
property:
now
this
power,
which
every
man
has
in
the
state
of
nature,
and
which
he
parts
with
to
the
society
in
all
such
cases
where
the
society
can
secure him,
is
to
use
such
means,
for
the
preserving
of
his
own
property,
as
he
thinks
good,
and
nature
allows
him;
and
to
punish
the
breach
of
the
law
of
nature
in
others,
so
as
(according
to
the
best
of
his
reason)
may
most
conduce
to
the
preservation
of
himself,
and
the
rest
of
mankind.
So
that
the
end
and
measure
of
this
power,
when
in
every
man's
hands
in
the
state
of
nature, being
the
preservation
of
all
of
his
society,
that
is,
all
mankind
in
general,
it
can
have
no
other
end
or
measure,
when
in
the
hands
of
the
magistrate,
but
to
preserve
the
members
of
that
society
in
their
lives, liberties,
and
possessions;
and
so
cannot
be
an
absolute,
arbitrary
power
over
their
lives
and
fortunes,
which
are
as
much
as
possible
to
be
preserved;
but
a power
to
make
laws,
and
annex
such
penalties
to
them,
as
may
tend
to
the
preservation
of
the
whole,
by
cutting
off
those
parts,
and
those
only,
which
are
so
corrupt,
that
they
threaten
the
sound
and
healthy,
without
which
no
severity
is
lawful.
And
this
power has
its
original
only
from
compact
and
agreement,
and
the
mutual
consent
of
those
who
make
up
the
community. Sect. 172. Thirdly, Despotical power
is
an
absolute,
arbitrary
power
one
man
has
over
another,
to
take
away
his
life, whenever
he
pleases.
This
is
a power,
which
neither
nature
gives,
for
it
has
made
no
such
distinction
between
one
man
and
another;
nor
compact
can
convey:
for
man
not
having
such
an
arbitrary
power
over
his
own
life, cannot
give
another
man
such
a power
over
it;
but
it
is
the
effect
only
of
forfeiture,
which
the
aggressor
makes
of
his
own
life,
when
he
puts
himself
into
the
state
of
war
with
another:
for
having
quitted
reason,
which
God
hath
given
to
be
the
rule
betwixt
man
and
man,
and
the
common
bond whereby
human
kind
is
united
into
one
fellowship
and
society;
and
having
renounced
the
way
of
peace
which
that
teaches,
and
made
use
of
the
force
of
war,
to
compass
his
unjust
ends
upon
another,
where
he
has
no
right;
and
so
revolting
from
his
own
kind
to
that
of
beasts,
by
making
force,
which
is
their's,
to
be
his
rule
of
right,
he
renders
himself
liable
to
be
destroyed
by
the
injured
person,
and
the
rest
of
mankind,
that
will
join
with
him
in
the
execution
of
justice,
as
any
other
wild beast,
or
noxious
brute,
with
whom
mankind
can
have
neither
society
nor
security*.
And
thus
captives, taken
in
a
just
and
lawful
war,
and
such
only,
are
subject
to
a despotical power, which,
as
it
arises
not
from
compact,
so
neither
is
it
capable
of
any,
but
is
the
state
of
war
continued:
for
what
compact
can
be
made
with
a
man
that
is
not
master
of
his
own
life?
what
condition
can
he
perform?
and
if
he
be
once
allowed
to
be
master
of
his
own
life,
the
despotical,
arbitrary
power
of
his
master
ceases.
He
that
is
master
of
himself,
and
his
own
life, has a
right
too
to
the
means
of
preserving it;
so
that
as
soon
as
compact enters, slavery ceases,
and
he
so
far
quits
his
absolute
power,
and
puts
an
end
to
the
state
of
war,
who
enters
into
conditions
with
his
captive. (*Another
copy
corrected
by
Mr. Locke, has
it
thus,
Noxious
brute
that
is
destructive
to
their
being.) Sect. 173.
Nature
gives
the
first
of
these, viz.
paternal
power
to
parents
for
the
benefit
of
their
children
during
their
minority,
to
supply
their
want
of
ability,
and
understanding
how
to
manage
their
property. (By
property
I
must
be
understood here,
as
in
other
places,
to
mean
that
property
which
men
have
in
their
persons
as
well
as
goods.)
Voluntary
agreement
gives
the
second, viz.
political
power
to
governors
for
the
benefit
of
their
subjects,
to
secure
them
in
the
possession
and
use
of
their
properties.
And
forfeiture
gives
the
third
despotical power
to
lords
for
their
own
benefit,
over
those
who
are
stripped
of
all
property. Sect. 174. He,
that
shall
consider
the
distinct
rise
and
extent,
and
the
different
ends
of
these
several
powers,
will
plainly see,
that
paternal
power
comes
as
far
short
of
that
of
the
magistrate,
as
despotical
exceeds
it;
and
that
absolute
dominion, however placed,
is
so
far
from
being
one
kind
of
civil
society,
that
it
is
as
inconsistent
with
it,
as
slavery
is
with
property.
Paternal
power
is
only
where
minority
makes
the
child
incapable
to
manage
his
property; political,
where
men
have
property
in
their
own
disposal;
and
despotical,
over
such
as
have
no
property
at
all.