- Tue May 26, 2020 1:40 pm
#75720
Hello,
I had some trouble with the John Locke passage. I think I just wasn't able to properly understand the content. I did a quick summary beside the passage to help me out, but upon reading the summary on p. 175, I realized how much I didn't pick up on. I know that the key to comparative passages is keeping track of similarities and differences, even subtle ones. While I understood passage A, I didn't really understand passage B. I didn't pick up on the author of passage B cautioning against any interpretation that does not take into account the historical context of the treatise. I know that he was cautioning against possible interpretations mentioned in lines 34-38, but where does he caution us that an interpretation that doesn't take into account its historical context is potentially dangerous?
My interpretation of the passage caused me to answer q1 wrong
I'm sorry if it's a stupid question
Any tips for this type of political/historical passage?
Thanks again!
I had some trouble with the John Locke passage. I think I just wasn't able to properly understand the content. I did a quick summary beside the passage to help me out, but upon reading the summary on p. 175, I realized how much I didn't pick up on. I know that the key to comparative passages is keeping track of similarities and differences, even subtle ones. While I understood passage A, I didn't really understand passage B. I didn't pick up on the author of passage B cautioning against any interpretation that does not take into account the historical context of the treatise. I know that he was cautioning against possible interpretations mentioned in lines 34-38, but where does he caution us that an interpretation that doesn't take into account its historical context is potentially dangerous?
My interpretation of the passage caused me to answer q1 wrong
I'm sorry if it's a stupid question
Any tips for this type of political/historical passage?
Thanks again!