YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :The Philosophies of Thomas Hobbes
Essays 31 - 60
In ten pages this paper examines how Hobbes and Plato would view the problems currently faced by the U.S. health care industry. F...
In five pages this paper examines how the principles outlined in Thomas Hobbes' Leviathan define what should be regarded as true l...
In five pages this paper contrasts and compares these philosophers' theories on government and morality. Six sources are cited in...
In four pages this paper examines how Hobbes viewed man's nature in a contrast with St. Augustine's philosophy. Three sources are...
In four pages this paper examines the state of nature as determined by Thomas Hobbes with an analysis of the three assumptions dev...
In eight pages this paper discusses the views of Burke and Hobbes on government, man, and human nature with a comparison of their ...
In six pages this paper discusses crime and punishment in a fictitious dialogue between Kant, Hobbes, and Plato. Three sources ar...
In six pages this research paper examines the religious and scientific perspectives offered by John Milton's Paradise Lost and Tho...
In ten pages the political theory and government structural views of Thomas Hobbes and Plato are compared and contrasted as they a...
In six pages this paper contrasts and compares the philosophical views of Hobbes and Plato regarding the state and democracy as re...
In five pages this text by Hobbes is applied to the thesis that war is inevitable. There are no other sources listed....
This topic is discussed within the context of the book Of the First and Second Natural Laws, and of Contracts by Thomas Hobbes in...
In twelve pages this paper examines man's nature in a contrast and comparison of Second Treatise of Civil Government by John Locke...
In about nine pages short essays consider the contradictions that appear in the theories of Sartre and Hobbes. There is no biblio...
In twenty pages this report compares the views of government espoused by each of these influential pollitical philosophers. Nine ...
of life or meant literally in respect to wealth. No matter how one interprets the sentiment, it seems that life is not good accord...
disorder," which does suggest that a social goal is that everyone should get along. But Hobbes knew early on that people do not ge...
say that while the theorists do each embrace the same explanation as to why political authority must exist, they do not agree on w...
injustice...have no place" (2001). Hobbes argued that during this period in human development it was common experience that each m...
it followeth necessarily when they that have the government of religion shall come to have either the wisdom of those men, their s...
a result, then, human action falls under the same "mechanized" process; specific desires occur in the human body and reveal themse...
the same species and rank, promiscuously born to all the same advantages of nature, and the use of the same faculties, should also...
one to his Will, and their Judgments to his Judgment" (Hobbes PG). Hobbes argues against the contention that through the di...
to be held in such high esteem as to the exclusion of all other government. Yet, Hobbes did not have much faith in people and tho...
the civilization that had sprung up, flourished for centuries, and now stood on the brink of massive change in his native land of ...
In ten pages this paper discusses the fool's argument, the personal contract, the prisoner's dilemma, and the assurance game as pe...
would affect others (Kahl, 2002). So then, it only makes sense given this framework that people in general tend to pursue that wh...
linger about fairness and equality, that one has to assume that to some extent, mans nature is related to this concept. First, Ho...
upon human sense organs. The sights, smells, touches, and sounds of pleasurable things gives rise to appetite. Appetite gives rise...
the adult world of constraints into an exciting world of fun in the sun, the children come up against the usual banes of social ex...