CHAPTER I. AN ESSAY CONCERNING THE TRUE ORIGINAL, EXTENT AND END OF CIVIL GOVERNMENT
Sect. 1.
It
having
been shewn
in
the
foregoing discourse,
All
these
premises having,
as
I think, been clearly
made
out,
it
is
impossible
that
the
rulers
now
on
earth
should
make
any
benefit,
or
derive
any
the
least
shadow
of
authority
from
that,
which
is
held
to
be
the
fountain
of
all
power, Adam's
private
dominion
and
paternal
jurisdiction;
so
that
he
that
will
not
give
just
occasion
to
think
that
all
government
in
the
world
is
the
product
only
of
force
and
violence,
and
that
men
live
together
by
no
other
rules
but
that
of
beasts,
where
the
strongest
carries it,
and
so
lay
a
foundation
for
perpetual
disorder
and
mischief, tumult,
sedition
and
rebellion, (things
that
the
followers
of
that
hypothesis
so
loudly
cry
out
against)
must
of
necessity
find
out
another
rise
of
government,
another
original
of
political
power,
and
another
way
of
designing
and
knowing
the
persons
that
have
it,
than
what
Sir
Robert
Filmer hath
taught
us. Sect. 2.
To
this
purpose, I
think
it
may
not
be
amiss,
to
set
down
what
I
take
to
be
political
power;
that
the
power
of
a
MAGISTRATE
over
a
subject
may
be
distinguished
from
that
of
a FATHER
over
his
children, a
MASTER
over
his
servant, a HUSBAND
over
his
wife,
and
a LORD
over
his
slave.
All
which
distinct
powers happening sometimes
together
in
the
same
man,
if
he
be
considered
under
these
different
relations,
it
may
help
us
to
distinguish
these
powers
one
from
wealth, a father
of
a family,
and
a captain
of
a galley. Sect. 3.
POLITICAL
POWER, then, I
take
to
be
a
RIGHT
of
making
laws
with
penalties
of
death,
and
consequently
all
less
penalties,
for
the
regulating
and
preserving
of
property,
and
of
employing
the
force
of
the
community,
in
the
execution
of
such
laws,
and
in
the
defence
of
the
commonwealth
from
foreign
injury;
and
all
this
only
for
the
public good.