 Every ethicist we've looked at this semester has been attempting to answer the question, how you should live your life by answering a different question. Hume and Sumner answered the question, how you should live your life by answering the question, how your moral is justified. Glaucon and Hobbes answered the question, whose interest is the most important? We had first reading, we had Epicures in the first reading from Aristotle answered the question, what has more worth? And the second reading from Aristotle answered the question, how do you acquire what has more worth? And now we moved on to Locke. So Locke is trying to answer the question, how should you live your life? Yes, but he's going to do that by asking a different question, trying to answer a different question. What's the different question that Locke is trying to answer?