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Thomas Hobbes
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Thomas Hobbes is one of the most influential political philosophers in Western history, and his ideas appear across courses in political theory, philosophy, history, and ethics. His major work, Leviathan, provides the foundation for most academic engagement with his thought, particularly his account of human nature, the social contract, and the origins of legitimate government. Hobbes's argument that individuals are driven by desire and self-interest, and that sovereign power is necessary to prevent social collapse, makes him a central figure in debates about authority, justice, and the relationship between law and morality.

Student papers on Hobbes tend to fall into several recognizable categories. Comparative essays are especially common, placing Hobbes alongside thinkers such as Locke, Rousseau, Machiavelli, and figures from Calvinist political theory to contrast their views on human nature, the state, and individual rights. Close readings of Leviathan itself — including specific sections on sovereignty and the dissolution of commonwealths — form another significant approach. Some essays apply Hobbesian frameworks to contemporary problems like global warming or the ethics of legislating morality, while others situate Hobbes within broader historical movements such as the Enlightenment.

A strong essay on Hobbes requires a focused thesis about a specific concept — such as the relationship between law and justice, or the nature of sovereign power — rather than a broad biographical overview. Textual evidence drawn directly from Leviathan carries the most weight, and secondary sources should support rather than replace close reading. The most common pitfall is treating Hobbes's view of human nature as simply cynical without engaging seriously with his logical argument for why sovereign government benefits all individuals.

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Paper Doctorate
Material Culture Commodities Are Inherently Morally Bad
This paper analyses the proposition that commodities are inherently morally bad. It strives to shed light on material culture and how it negatively affects the society. The paper investigates the origins of this proposition, and the ideas that such a proposition is based upon. In addition, the paper outlines opposing points of view on this debate.
Paper Masters
Separation of church and state in Roger Williams' The Bloody Tenet of Persecution
Roger Williams was a Puritan Separatist and Baptist, who founded the new colony of Rhode Island after his expulsion from Massachusetts. His views were quite radical and democratic by 17th Century standards, since he supported religious freedom for all individuals and strongly disapproved of state-supported religions and established churches of the kind that existed everywhere at the time. Although his own views were strictly Calvinist, and he regularly entered into religious disputes with supporters of other religions, Rhode Island did not use the power of the government to enforce religious conformity.
Essay Undergraduate
Hobbes vs. Locke Thomas Hobbes and John
Thomas Hobbes and John Locke each provide intriguing opinions concerning the state of nature, but their thinking differs when considering the form of governing that each promotes as being the most effective. The individuals in Locke's example of a government appear to have greater security than those in Hobbes', as the latter considers that there would be nothing wrong with people renouncing some of their rights in order to be provided with protection from the government. Locke emphasized that rights such as life, liberty, and the right to own property are inalienable and that it would be wrong for an institution, regardless of its intentions, to deny people of them.
Research Paper Doctorate
Machiavelli, Hobbes, More, and Aristotle on Political Human Nature
Machiavelli and Thomas Hobbes appear to recommend political actions and systems that take people "the way they are." In contrast, Thomas More and Aristotle appear to recommend political actions and systems designed to…
Research Paper Doctorate
Aristotle\'s Nichomacean Ethics and Thomas Hobbes Leviathan
In every society, there are tens of hundreds of individuals whose personal value system leads them to leading a life based on principles of honesty, trust, fairness and compassion. To that extent, justice, as a concept…
Research Paper Doctorate
Political theory concepts and frameworks
Thomas Hobbes' Philosophy in the Leviathan
Research Paper Doctorate
Machiavelli Thomas Hobbes Thomas More Aristotle
Under what circumstances is it just (or right, or ethical) to go to war? Why? Compare and contrast how Machiavelli, Thomas More, and Thomas Hobbes might answer this question.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Will Theory and Inalienable Rights
Although America's founding documents declared unequivocally "that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness," the signing of the Declaration of Independence did nothing more to end the debate over rights, power, and liberty than did the discourses of Immanuel Kant, Thomas Hobbes, and John Locke. The notion of inalienable rights is rooted in Hobbesian theory, after Hobbes wrote in his Leviathan that "to use his own power, as he will himself, for the preservation of his own Nature; that is to say, of his own Life; and consequently, of doing anything, which in his own judgment, and Reason, he shall conceive to be the (most) apt means thereunto," thus offering philosophy's most basic elucidation of the concept of inalienable rights. Western philosophy has always focused the attention of its greatest thinkers on the concept of natural versus legal rights, with the former representing life, liberty, and those ostensibly inalienable rights granted to all people regardless of culture or custom, and the latter consisting of the rights bestowed upon citizens by the legal apparatus of their government.
Research Paper Doctorate
Functionalism Grow Out of Structuralism
Psychology is one of the youngest sciences and emerged as a separate discipline only in the late 19th century; it has its roots in the philosophy of ancient times. As a matter of fact every development in virtually all…
Paper Undergraduate
Legislating Morality in America
There is a common notion that morality cannot be legislated. In fact, all laws tend to legislate some moral principle. This paper looks at the definition of morality, moral reasoning, and how laws that attempted to force unpopular morals on people failed. The factors relating to successful legislation and philosophical aspects of morallity are discussed