Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- Aristotle on the Soul's Conflicts: Toward an Understanding of Virtue Ethics
- Coercion, Ideology, and Education in Hobbes's Leviathan
- The Hobbesian Side of Hume
- The Natural Goodness of Humanity
- Metaphysics, Philosophy: Rousseau on the Problem of Evil
- Within the Limits of Reason
- A Cosmopolitan Kingdom of Ends
- Legislating for a Realm of Ends: The Social Dimension of Autonomy
- Kant on the Objectivity of the Moral Law
- Kantian Virtue: Priggish or Passional?
- Taking the Law into Our Own Hands: Kant on the Right to Revolution
- Kant on Aesthetic and Biological Purposiveness
- Kant on Ends and the Meaning of Life
- Community and Completion
Coercion, Ideology, and Education in Hobbes's Leviathan
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- Aristotle on the Soul's Conflicts: Toward an Understanding of Virtue Ethics
- Coercion, Ideology, and Education in Hobbes's Leviathan
- The Hobbesian Side of Hume
- The Natural Goodness of Humanity
- Metaphysics, Philosophy: Rousseau on the Problem of Evil
- Within the Limits of Reason
- A Cosmopolitan Kingdom of Ends
- Legislating for a Realm of Ends: The Social Dimension of Autonomy
- Kant on the Objectivity of the Moral Law
- Kantian Virtue: Priggish or Passional?
- Taking the Law into Our Own Hands: Kant on the Right to Revolution
- Kant on Aesthetic and Biological Purposiveness
- Kant on Ends and the Meaning of Life
- Community and Completion
Summary
Some years ago while studying Rawls's Dewey Lectures I came across a footnote to Lecture II that forced a conceptual shift in my understanding of Hobbes's political philosophy as dramatic as a duck-rabbit. The note was not about Hobbes. It was appended to Rawls's discussion of the full publicity condition of Justice as Fairness, and in it Rawls observed that a well-ordered society does not require an ideology (in Marx's sense) in order to achieve stability. Full publicity requires a transparency of the real terms of social cooperation, which citizens can then measure against their fundamental interests and their self-conceptions. Marx, I ruminated, must have been right in holding that a state not founded on subjects' real interests will require ideology for its stability over time, because force alone cannot maintain stability forever. The latent assumption that force alone cannot ensure stability struck me as obviously correct, and I found myself at a loss to understand how Hobbes, the forefather of our social contract tradition and undeniably a formidable and savvy philosopher, could have failed to realize it. The philosophical interpretations of Hobbes I was acquainted with all urged that he sought to secure a perpetual order based on absolute obedience by means of credible threats of physical force against subjects. If that long-run strategy was so obviously hopeless, what must Hobbes actually have been trying to do?
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- Reclaiming the History of EthicsEssays for John Rawls, pp. 36 - 65Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
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