Leviathan

Leviathan

Penguin Classics
by Thomas Hobbes
Publisher: Penguin Classics
Trade Paperback, 728 pages
Price: $13.00
"During the time men live without a common Power to keep them all in awe, they are in that condition which is called Warre."

Written during the turmoil of the English Civil War, Leviathan is an ambitious and highly original work of political philosophy. Claiming that man's essential nature is competitive and selfish, Hobbes formulates the case for a powerful sovereign—or 'Leviathan'—to enforce peace and the law, substituting security for the anarchic freedom he believed human being would otherwise experience. This worldview shocked many of Hobbes's contemporaries, and his work was publicly burnt for sedition and blasphemy when it was first published. But in his rejection of Aristotle's view of man as a naturally social being, and in his painstaking analysis of the ways in which society can and should function, Hobbes opened up a whole new world of political science

Based on the original 1651 text, this edition incorporates Hobbes's own corrections, while also retaining the original spelling and punctuation, and read with vividness and clarity. C. B. Macpherson's introduction elucidates for the general reader one of the most fascinating works of modern philosophy.

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