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Leviathan

Or the Matter, Forme and Power of a Commonwealth Ecclasiasticall and Civil

Leviathan( )
Author: Hobbes, Thomas
Introduction by: Berkowitz, Peter
ISBN:978-1-59698-081-5
Publication Date:Feb 2009
Publisher:Regnery Publishing
Imprint:Gateway Editions
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $18.95
Book Description:

To read Hobbes on his own terms is to discover a provocative rival to contemporary perspectives on morals and politics, one that challenges widely shared assumptions about the roots of our rights and calls into question common conclusions about the scope of political authority in a society based on the consent of the governed. At the same time, it is to encounter a complement to contemporary perspectives on the liberal state, one that offers a distinctive and powerful basis for the...
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Book Details
Pages:619
Detailed Subjects: Political Science / History & Theory
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):6 x 9 x 1.8 Inches
Book Weight:1.455 Pounds
Author Biography
Hobbes, Thomas (Author)
Thomas Hobbes was born in Malmesbury, the son of a wayward country vicar. He was educated at Magdalen Hall, Oxford, and was supported during his long life by the wealthy Cavendish family, the Earls of Devonshire. Traveling widely, he met many of the leading intellectuals of the day, including Francis Bacon, Galileo Galilei, and Rene Descartes.

As a philosopher and political theorist, Hobbes established---along with, but independently of, Descartes---early modern modes of thought in reaction to the scholasticism that characterized the seventeenth century. Because of his ideas, he was constantly in dispute with scientists and theologians, and many of his works were banned. His writings on psychology raised the possibility (later realized) that psychology could become a natural science, but his theory of politics is his most enduring achievement. In brief, his theory states that the problem of establishing order in society requires a sovereign to whom people owe loyalty and who in turn has duties toward his or her subjects. His prose masterpiece Leviathan (1651) is regarded as a major contribution to the theory of the state.

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