Leviathan after 350 Years
Tom Sorell and Luc Foisneau
Abstract
This book brings together chapters that discuss Hobbes's masterpiece after three and a half centuries. The contributors address three different themes. The first is the place of Leviathan within Hobbes's output as a political philosopher. What does Leviathan add to The Elements of Law (1640) and De Cive (1642; 1647)? What is the relation between the English Leviathan and the Latin version of the book (1668)? Does Leviathan deserve its pre-eminence? The second theme concerns the connections between Hobbes's psychology and Hobbes's politics. The chapters discuss Hobbes's curious views on the sig ... More
This book brings together chapters that discuss Hobbes's masterpiece after three and a half centuries. The contributors address three different themes. The first is the place of Leviathan within Hobbes's output as a political philosopher. What does Leviathan add to The Elements of Law (1640) and De Cive (1642; 1647)? What is the relation between the English Leviathan and the Latin version of the book (1668)? Does Leviathan deserve its pre-eminence? The second theme concerns the connections between Hobbes's psychology and Hobbes's politics. The chapters discuss Hobbes's curious views on the significance of laughter, evidence that he connected life in the state with passionlessness; the ways in which such things as fear for one's life entitle subjects to rebel; and the question of how the sovereign's personal passions are to be squared with his personifying a multitude. The third theme is Hobbes's views on the Bible and the Church: chapters examine the tensions between any allowance for ecclesiastical and (differently) biblical authority on the one hand, and political authority on the other.
Keywords:
Hobbes,
laughter,
passionlessness,
the Bible,
political authority,
The Elements of Law,
De Cive
Bibliographic Information
| Print publication date: 2004 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780199264612 |
| Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: September 2010 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199264612.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Tom Sorell, Editor
Department of Philosophy, University of Essex
Author Webpage
Luc Foisneau, Editor
CNRS, Paris
Author Webpage
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