Indice ● Table of contents
Giuliana Di Biase, Introduction. Locke and Travel Literature, p. 7
Articles
Daniel Carey, John Locke’s Use of Inquiries: Method, Natural History, and Religious Belief, p. 13
James Farr, Locke Surveys New France, p. 41
Giuliana Di Biase, Travel Books, Slavery and Colonial Ambitions in the Correspondence between John Locke and Nicolas Toinard (1678-1704), p. 73
Saulo Henrique Souza Silva, John Locke and the Atheists: Sociability in the Natural History of Peoples , p. 103
Luisa Simonutti, John Locke and the Levant, p. 127
Ann Talbot, All the World is not Mile End: Content and Context of Locke’s Letters Concerning Toleration, p. 159
Notes
Emily Thomas, Travel, Philosophy, and Locke’s Openness to the Unknown, p. 193