Hobbes Studies
Volume 24, Issue 2, 2011
- ISSN : 0921-5891
- E-ISSN : 1875-0257
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Volumes & issues:
Volume 26 (2013)
Volume 25 (2012)
Volume 24 (2011)
Volume 23 (2010)
Volume 22 (2009)
Volume 21 (2008)
Volume 20 (2007)
Volume 19 (2006)
Volume 18 (2005)
Volume 17 (2004)
Volume 16 (2003)
Volume 15 (2002)
Volume 14 (2001)
Volume 13 (2000)
Volume 12 (1999)
Volume 11 (1998)
Volume 10 (1997)
Volume 9 (1996)
Volume 8 (1995)
Volume 7 (1994)
Volume 6 (1993)
Volume 5 (1992)
Volume 4 (1991)
Volume 3 (1990)
Volume 2 (1989)
Volume 1 (1988)
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Contents of Volume 24
- Author: none
- pp. i–ii
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Happiness in a Mechanistic Universe: Thomas Hobbes on the Nature and Attainability of Happiness
- Author: Severin V. Kitanov
- pp. 117–136 (20)
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The article revisits the originality of Hobbes's concept of happiness on the basis of Hobbes's two accounts found respectively in Thomas White's De Mundo Examined and Leviathan. It is argued that Hobbes's claim that happiness consists in the unhindered advance from one acquired good to another ought to be understood against the background of Hobbes's theory of sensation and the imagination, on the one hand, and Hobbes's doctrine of conatus, on the other. It is further claimed that the account of happiness in White's De Mundo differs from that in Leviathan. In the former work, happiness is defined not as the mere progression from one good to another but as the joy/mental pleasure derived from the awareness of one's unhindered advance. The traditional claim that Hobbes is an ethical subjectivist is examined in connection with Hobbes's view of the subjectivity of happiness and the rejection of the summum bonum. Lastly, Hobbes's distinction between worldly and everlasting happiness is discussed.
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Resisting the Scaffold: Self-Preservation and Limits of Obligation in Hobbes's Leviathan
- Author: Patricia Sheridan
- pp. 137–157 (21)
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The degree to which Hobbes's citizenry retains its right to resist sovereign power has been the source of a significant debate. It has been argued by a number of scholars that there is a clear avenue for legitimate rebellion in Hobbes's state, as described in the Leviathan – in this work, Hobbes asserts that subjects can retain their natural right to self-preservation in civil society, and that this represents an inalienable right that cannot, under any circumstances, be transferred to the sovereign. The conclusion frequently drawn from this feature of Hobbes's account is that it places a considerable limit on sovereign authority. The right to self-preservation has been taken as proof that Hobbes sought to ensure that the sovereign's power relies upon the continual consent of the individuals that make up his or her constituency. I want to examine Hobbes's account of this civil right in Leviathan in order to show that this line of interpretation is ultimately unfounded. While self-preservation results from the individual's own judgment of threats to her personal safety, it is justified in only the most strictly delineated contexts. Judgments regarding the overall peace and security of the state do not, and cannot, fall to individual experiences and judgments. Hobbes is quite adamant that individuals are not appropriate judges of right and wrong action in matters the sovereign legislates.
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Hobbes, Signification, and Insignificant Names
- Author: Stewart Duncan
- pp. 158–178 (21)
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The notion of signification is an important part of Hobbes's philosophy of language. It also has broader relevance, as Hobbes argues that key terms used by his opponents are insignificant. However Hobbes's talk about names' signification is puzzling, as he appears to have advocated conflicting views. This paper argues that Hobbes endorsed two different views of names' signification in two different contexts. When stating his theoretical views about signification, Hobbes claimed that names signify ideas. Elsewhere he talked as if words signified the things they named. Seeing this does not just resolve a puzzle about Hobbes's statements about signification. It also helps us to understand how Hobbes's arguments about insignificant speech work. With one important exception, they depend on the view that names signify things, not on Hobbes's stated theory that words signify ideas. The paper concludes by discussing whether arguments about insignificant speech can provide independent support for Hobbes's views about other issues, such as materialism.
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The Title of Hobbes's Refutation of Thomas White's De Mundo
- Author: Noel Malcolm
- pp. 179–188 (10)
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Hobbes's manuscript refutation of Thomas White bears no title. Some modern scholars have proposed, on the basis of references to it by Mersenne, that the work was entitled 'De motu, loco et tempore', and the abbreviated version of this, 'De motu', has become current in modern scholarship. This research note analyses Mersenne's references, and concludes that this apparent title was a descriptive phrase introduced by Mersenne himself. The full description included the term 'philosophia' (thus: Hobbes's 'philosophy concerning motion, place and time'); this suggests a double focus, not only on the manuscript text, but also on Hobbes's 'body' of natural philosophy more generally.
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Behemoth or the Long Parliament
- Author: Luc Borot
- pp. 189–191 (3)
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Great Books, Bad Arguments: Republic, Leviathan and The Communist Manifesto
- Author: Timo Airaksinen
- pp. 192–195 (4)
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Thomas Hobbes
- Author: Daniel Eggers
- pp. 196–200 (5)
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Die Rezeption der aristotelischen politischen Philosophie bei Marsilius von Padua. Eine Untersuchung zur ersten Diktion des Defensor pacis
- Author: Andreas Niederberger
- pp. 201–204 (4)
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Institutio Oratoria: Bacon, Hobbes, Descartes, Spinoza
- Author: Dietrich Schotte
- pp. 205–209 (5)
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Moto, Luogo e Tempo
- Author: Martine Pécharman
- pp. 210–215 (6)
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List of Contributors
- Author: none
- pp. 217–219 (3)
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