An Essay Concerning Human Understanding

“This abridgment by Kenneth Winkler is the best that has ever been done. Winkler’s judgment as to what must be kept and what may be dropped is unerring, and his literary skill has enabled him to fashion a text that reads smoothly. An illuminating Introduction and comprehensive glossary enhance the value of this volume for students.” —Vere Chappell, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

SKU
25256g

John Locke
Abridged and Edited, with Introduction, by Kenneth P. Winkler

1996 - 416 pp.

Ebook edition available for $10.95, see purchasing links below.

Grouped product items
Format ISBN Price Qty
Paper 978-0-87220-216-0
$13.00
Instructor Examination (Review) Copy 978-0-87220-216-0
$2.00

Includes generous selections from the Essay, topically arranged passages from the replies to Stillingfleet, a chronology, a bibliography, a glossary, and an index based on the entries that Locke himself devised.

Reviews:

“This abridgment by Kenneth Winkler is the best that has ever been done. Winkler’s judgment as to what must be kept and what may be dropped is unerring, and his literary skill has enabled him to fashion a text that reads smoothly. An illuminating Introduction and comprehensive glossary enhance the value of this volume for students.”
     —Vere Chappell, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 

"Locke’s Essay is a massive, scarcely organized work that is easy for students to get lost in and difficult for teachers to lend coherence to. But Winkler’s abridgment succeeds remarkably at bringing out the underlying structure of Locke’s masterpiece without sacrificing any of the long and important passages that put the meat on that structure. I didn’t think this could be done until I came across Winkler’s abridgment. It certainly makes teaching Locke much easier, since it makes the structure of the Essay more apparent, and leaves the teacher thus freer to concentrate on the details of the text. I know of no passages from the Essay left out of this abridgment that I would prefer to use in a lower-level class. If anything, I would have made the abridgment shorter still. But to my knowledge, nobody has yet done a better job than Winkler.”
     —Michael Rolf, University of Pennsylvania

About the Author:

Kenneth Winkler is Kingman Brewster, Jr. Professor of Philosophy, Yale University.