"It may seem strange to some man, that has not well weighed these things; that Nature should thus dissociate and render men apt to invade and destroy one another: and he may therefore, not trusting to this inference, made from the passions, desire perhaps to have the same confirmed by experience. Let him therefore consider with himself: when taking a journey, he arms himself and seeks to go well accompanied; when going to sleep, he locks his doors; when even in his house he locks his chests; and this when he knows there be laws and public officers, armed, to revenge all injuries shall be done him; what opinion he has of his fellow subjects, when he rides armed; of his fellow citizens, when he locks his doors; and of his children, and servants, when he locks his chests. Does he not there as much accuse mankind by his actions as I do by my words?"
Thus, it would seem to me that Hobbes has not managed to escape the specter of anarchism. Indeed, what he has done is provided yet another reason why we should want to be anarchists.
What say you? — Alvin Capello
To understand the root of political nature, you have to understand the root of being born in the first place.
Well, could you kindly explain that to me please? — Alvin Capello
Enculturation of individuals into a way-of-life, creates the epiphonemona of politico-economic institutions. People become points to be manipulated to keep the institutions going. Each person thinks it is for them, but they are for the systems in place, rather. There is no way out of this.
This is empirically false. Political institutions are an extremely recent development. Indeed, for the vast majority of human existence there have not been any states or governments at all. Indeed, we even see stateless societies in our own time, cf. Zomia. — Alvin Capello
The point is replicating a person is replicating social conventions. It is also replicating the assumptions of the parents, that people SHOULD be born, and that it is good FOR them.
That's probably true. A fascinating discussion no doubt, but surely outside the scope of this thread. — Alvin Capello
First let me comment that your OP does not distinguish properly between anarchy and anarchism- two different things. Anarchy is a state of chaotic affairs- truly no order. That is what Hobbes was postulating. Anarchism as a relatively modern 19th century idea that we live in collectives, like the end state of communism.
Also, the government taking control does not entail that people rebel against it.
Thus, it would seem to me that Hobbes has not managed to escape the specter of anarchism. Indeed, what he has done is provided yet another reason why we should want to be anarchists. — Alvin Capello
That's surely true, but the distinction between anarchy as chaos is not salient to the issue at hand. I'm just wondering whether Hobbes' example might not lead to an unintended conclusion for him. — Alvin Capello
What chains us is our needs and wants in the first place which is rooted in being born in the first place. — schopenhauer1
What rules a man emotion or reason? If reason, how do the people of a society get their reasoning?
What are the circumstances that shaped Hobbes' consciousness?
Yes, Hobbes says an authority is the only way to suspend the war of all against all.
He is also a Monarchist who dismisses forms of the Republic that would presume to provide such authority as is needed to stop that war.
The two ideas are obviously intertwined but are not identical.
Unless you agree with Hobbes on the matter.
But I don't think this argument actually supports his point. In fact, I think this argument actually leads towards anarchism. For if we have this natural distrust of our fellow man, and further if the natural state amongst men is that of perpetual war, then placing another man or group of men in power over us would not actually waylay the state of perpetual war. Indeed, all this would do is intensify it greatly. For while there may allegedly exist a state of 'peace' amongst the ruled, there would still be the state of perpetual war between the rulers and the ruled; in fact, it would only be magnified, since the ruled are now in a totally asymmetrical position. — Alvin Capello
I think this is a fair criticism of Hobbe's reasoning. Kant makes a broadly similar point when laying out his theory of the social contract. If the state of nature was a perpetual state of war where even the concept of rights and duties doesn't exist, not only is there no reason to ever trust your fellow man, there is also no reason to band together to change the state of affairs. The latter requires you to already have some idea how a better, more cooperative soceity could operate. So the basic concepts that underlie that society must already exist.
I'd agree to you insofar as the supposed "perpetual state of war" is not ultimately a good argument against anarchism. All humans have the desire and ability to cooperate to reach certain goals, and will do so without coercion. I think the problem that anarchism faces is a bit more down the line: How to effectively organise large-scale social cooperation without establishing hierachies and ruler / ruled relationships.
What rules a man emotion or reason? If reason, how do the people of a society get their reasoning?
- ↪Athena
I have absolutely no idea. This seems to me to be an empirical question; so I'm not sure that I can comment on it.
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What are the circumstances that shaped Hobbes' consciousness?
- ↪Athena
You will have to expand on this question. What do you mean by 'consciousness'? Consciousness of what?
Yes, Hobbes says an authority is the only way to suspend the war of all against all.
He is also a Monarchist who dismisses forms of the Republic that would presume to provide such authority as is needed to stop that war.
The two ideas are obviously intertwined but are not identical.
Unless you agree with Hobbes on the matter.
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- ↪Valentinus
This is an accurate description of Hobbes' view, but I'm trying to ascertain whether the example he provides really serves to establish this conclusion. — Alvin Capello
Indeed, all this would do is intensify it greatly. For while there may allegedly exist a state of 'peace' amongst the ruled, there would still be the state of perpetual war between the rulers and the ruled; in fact, it would only be magnified, since the ruled are now in a totally asymmetrical position. — Alvin Capello
This is an accurate description of Hobbes' view, but I'm trying to ascertain whether the example he provides really serves to establish this conclusion. — Alvin Capello
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