... Shrader-Frechette 19 93) , or in the writings of Burke. For Locke, property rightswere valid only as long as they did not infringe on the rights of othersto have “enough and as good” ([1690] 19 63, 32 9). It ... earlier genera-tions. And for Locke, “nothing was made by God for Man to spoil ordestroy” (ibid., 33 2), a concept that has not yet been fully noted bymany conservatives. The point is that Locke ... job of building them. What better educational opportunity couldthere be?THE LIMITS OF NATURE 1 23 autism (see also Gladwin et al. 1997). The collective irrationalitymasquerading as realism or...