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The Wisdom of Mentor
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 April 2022
Abstract
Thomas Hobbes posited a social contract which legitimates sovereign authority. But what grounds, or could ground, such a contract? Through reflection on Oakeshott, and on Aristotle's Nichomachean Ethics, the paper argues for a so far unrecognised mode of human association: philic association. It briefly considers a possible expression of philic association in the history of English law, before making the case for programmes of mentoring as a policy both reflective and supportive of this mode. It ends by suggesting that the existence of such a mode shows why Hobbes's social contract theory, however ingenious and influential it has proven to be, is neither sufficient nor necessary for its stated purpose.
- Type
- Paper
- Information
- Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplements , Volume 91: A Philosophers' Manifesto: Ideas and Arguments to Change the World , May 2022 , pp. 271 - 280
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy and the contributors 2022
References
1 This paper is considerably shorter than the lecture as given; zealots are encouraged to view the original online.
2 I am of course speaking purely from an academic perspective, not as a Minister or Member of Parliament.