Description

Book Synopsis
This book argues that the fundamental foundation of Hobbes’s political philosophy in Leviathan is wise, generous, loving, sincere, just, and valiant—in sum, magnanimous—statecraft, whereby sovereigns aim to realize natural justice, manifest as eminent and other-regarding virtue. It proposes that concerns over the virtues of the natural person bearing the office of the sovereign suffuse Hobbes’s political philosophy, defining both his theory of new foundations and his critiques of law and obligation. These aspects of Hobbes’s thought are new to Leviathan, as they respond to limitations in his early works in political theory, Elements and De Cive—limitations made apparent by the civil wars and the regicide of Charles I. Though new, this book argues that they tap into ancient political and philosophical ideas, foremostly the variously celebrated, mystified, and maligned figure of the orator founder.

Table of Contents
New Foundations, Statecraft, and Virtue in Hobbes’s Leviathan: Sovereignty as a Vocation
One: Introduction
Two: Leviathan against the Borough Corporation
Three: Rhetorical Action and Constitutive Politics
Four: Rhetorical Action in Leviathan
Five: New Foundation in Leviathan
Six: Law and Natural Justice
Seven: Obligation, Resistance, and Sovereign Virtue
Bibliography
Index

Sovereignty as a Vocation in Hobbes's Leviathan:

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A Hardback by Matthew Hoye

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    View other formats and editions of Sovereignty as a Vocation in Hobbes's Leviathan: by Matthew Hoye

    Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
    Publication Date: 11/12/2023
    ISBN13: 9789463728096, 978-9463728096
    ISBN10: 9463728090
    Also in:
    History of ideas

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    This book argues that the fundamental foundation of Hobbes’s political philosophy in Leviathan is wise, generous, loving, sincere, just, and valiant—in sum, magnanimous—statecraft, whereby sovereigns aim to realize natural justice, manifest as eminent and other-regarding virtue. It proposes that concerns over the virtues of the natural person bearing the office of the sovereign suffuse Hobbes’s political philosophy, defining both his theory of new foundations and his critiques of law and obligation. These aspects of Hobbes’s thought are new to Leviathan, as they respond to limitations in his early works in political theory, Elements and De Cive—limitations made apparent by the civil wars and the regicide of Charles I. Though new, this book argues that they tap into ancient political and philosophical ideas, foremostly the variously celebrated, mystified, and maligned figure of the orator founder.

    Table of Contents
    New Foundations, Statecraft, and Virtue in Hobbes’s Leviathan: Sovereignty as a Vocation
    One: Introduction
    Two: Leviathan against the Borough Corporation
    Three: Rhetorical Action and Constitutive Politics
    Four: Rhetorical Action in Leviathan
    Five: New Foundation in Leviathan
    Six: Law and Natural Justice
    Seven: Obligation, Resistance, and Sovereign Virtue
    Bibliography
    Index

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