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Hobbes’s era. It appears to be a complete halt on the pathway to the concept of modern science which is founded on the basis of observation of patients, experiment and theory building. However, it gives him a way to follow when he sets out ...
life spanned the upheavals of the English Civil War (1642–51) and its aftermath, as well as the discoveries in science and math by contemporaries such as Francis Bacon, René Descartes, Galileo Galilei, Johann Kepler, and Marin Mersenne (Wo...
and influential political philosophers of the modern era, because of his certain meaning and critical materialist metaphysics as of Descartes. Hobbes does not represent a theory like many others, who try to give a solution for the governme...
Even more than Bacon, Thomas Hobbes illustrated the transition from medieval to modern thinking in Britain. His Leviathan effectively developed a vocabulary for philosophy in the English language by using Anglicized versions of the technic...
Locke's "Two Treatises of Government". Princeton: Princeton University Press, ch. 13, sect 8, 1986. Laslett, Peter. "The English Revolution and Locke's 'Two Treatises of Government'." The Cambridge Historical Journal 12, no. 1 Pp. 40–55. ....
that we consider good. Most activities are a means to a higher end. The highest human good, then, is that activity that is an end in itself. That good is happiness. When we aim at happiness, we do so for its own sake, not because happiness ...
views of Hobbes, Aristotle and Locke on a desirable political system, which can guide human beings to preserve their lives in a peaceful state. In the light of evidence collected from primary sources, paper analyzes agreement or disagreeme...