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=== The Netherlands === Locke fled to the [[Netherlands]] in 1683 in the company of [[Anthony Ashley Cooper, 1st Earl of Shaftesbury|Shaftesbury]], under strong suspicion of involvement in the [[Rye House Plot]], although there is little evidence to suggest that he was directly involved in the scheme. While in the Netherlands, he lived under the pen-name dr. Van Linden.<ref name="Jan Bor 1996, p. 260">Jan Bor, Errit Petersma & Jelle Kingma (eds.), ''De verbeelding van het denken. Geïllustreerde geschiedenis van de westerse en oosterse filosofie'', Amsterdam/Antwerpen : Atlas Contact, 1996, ISBN 90-254-396, p. 260</ref> The philosopher and novelist [[Rebecca Newberger Goldstein]] argues that during his five years in Holland, Locke chose his friends "from among the same freethinking members of dissenting Protestant groups as [[Spinoza]]'s small group of loyal confidants [Baruch Spinoza had died in 1677], Locke almost certainly met men in Amsterdam who spoke of the ideas of that renegade Jew who ... insisted on identifying himself through his religion of reason alone." While she says that "Locke's strong empiricist tendencies" would have "disinclined him to read a grandly metaphysical work such as Spinoza's ''[[Ethics (Spinoza)|Ethics]]'', in other ways he was deeply receptive to Spinoza's ideas, most particularly to the rationalist's well thought out argument for political and [[religious tolerance]] and the necessity of the separation of church and state."<ref>{{cite book|author=Rebecca Newberger Goldstein|title=Betraying Spinoza: The Renegade Jew Who Gave Us Modernity|location=New York|publisher=Schocken Books|year=2006|pages=260–261}}</ref> Among the friends he made in the Netherlands are [[Antonie van Leeuwenhoek|Van Leeuwenhoek]] and Van Limborch, the leader of the [[Remonstrants]].<ref name="Jan Bor 1996, p. 260"/> In the Netherlands, Locke had time to return to his writing, spending a great deal of time working on the ''Essay Concerning Human Understanding'' and composing the ''Letter on Toleration.''
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