In such commonwealths, a covenant is forged between ruler and subject in which subjects surrender certain liberties-like the freedom to kill one another-in exchange for protection and order under the civil laws that are established and upheld by a sovereign ruler or assembly. For Hobbes, the best and only way to do so is to live in a commonwealth, a kingdom or nation-state led by an undivided central authority figure. Given that natural law allows for each individual’s self-preservation, humans face no choice but to find a way to live peaceably among one another. In the book’s most famous passage, Hobbes writes that under these conditions life is “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short” (76). In the absence of a central authority figure, there is nothing to restrain humans from existing in a state of perpetual war with one another in which resources, honor, and glory are all fought over in an endless cycle of violence. In Part 1, “Of Man,” Hobbes writes that humankind is governed first and foremost by natural laws dictating that each individual prioritize self-preservation above all else.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |