释义 |
Lockian, a. and n.|ˈlɒkɪən| [f. Locke, the English philosopher (1632–1704) + -ian.] A. adj. Of or pertaining to Locke or his followers.
1858W. R. Pirie Inq. Hum. Mind ii. ii. 80 The most eminent of the professed Lockian School. 1877E. Caird Philos. Kant ii. xiii. 511 Kant was the founder of a new philosophy, which was fatal to the Leibnitzian, as well as to the Lockian, Individualism. B. n. = Lockist. In recent Dicts. Hence ˈLockianism, the philosophical doctrines of Locke or his followers.
1862Macm. Mag. July 201 It is here that Berkeley passes from Lockianism to Platonism. 1886Seth in Encycl. Brit. XXI. 383/1 The principles of Lockianism. |