Richard Hooker's understanding of political society has engendered significant debate. Does he hold that society is natural, in keeping with his commitment to aspects of Aristotelianism? Or does he believe that society is conventional, leading somehow to a social contractarian conception of society? My contention is that he is a political naturalist, though his naturalism is tempered by his Augustinian theological anthropology. Hooker emphasizes human sin in his account of the nature and purpose of civil government, and gives humankind agency in the establishment of society. But, ultimately, he considers political life to be natural to the human condition. In this way, Hooker navigates a via media between Aristotelian naturalism and convent...
What does Nature mean in the famous Aristotelian formula “man is, by nature, a political animal”?...
Advisors: Andrea Radasanu.Committee members: Andrea Radasanu; S. Adam Seagrave; Matthew J. Streb.Inc...
Conventionalism asserts that there are a variety of notions of justice, but no true one. The fundam...
Although Richard Hooker’s private attitudes were clericalist and authoritarian, his constitutional t...
For the political naturalist, skepticism about political obligations only arises because of a basic ...
Aristotle thought we are by nature political animals, but the state‐of‐nature tradition sees politic...
Norman Kemp Smith in his article “The Naturalism of Hume” formulated standard naturalistic interpret...
Much of the scholarship on Rousseau leads us to believe that Rousseau took either an exalted or an a...
The reflection developed here deals with one of the greatest political paradoxes of modern politica...
Reviews of Roger D. Masters' "The Nature of Politics"; Fred Feldman's "Confrontations with the Reape...
Two contrasting interpretations of the interrelation between politics and anthropology have co-exist...
Today the ethical and normative concerns of everyday citizens are all too often sidelined from the s...
The problem of nature is arguably the central problem in Rousseau’s thought. It may be posed in the ...
Richard Hooker's theology of Law is rooted in a twofold argument: the systematic appropriation of th...
This article investigates the concept of law in Rousseau, analyzing if he defends the idea of natura...
What does Nature mean in the famous Aristotelian formula “man is, by nature, a political animal”?...
Advisors: Andrea Radasanu.Committee members: Andrea Radasanu; S. Adam Seagrave; Matthew J. Streb.Inc...
Conventionalism asserts that there are a variety of notions of justice, but no true one. The fundam...
Although Richard Hooker’s private attitudes were clericalist and authoritarian, his constitutional t...
For the political naturalist, skepticism about political obligations only arises because of a basic ...
Aristotle thought we are by nature political animals, but the state‐of‐nature tradition sees politic...
Norman Kemp Smith in his article “The Naturalism of Hume” formulated standard naturalistic interpret...
Much of the scholarship on Rousseau leads us to believe that Rousseau took either an exalted or an a...
The reflection developed here deals with one of the greatest political paradoxes of modern politica...
Reviews of Roger D. Masters' "The Nature of Politics"; Fred Feldman's "Confrontations with the Reape...
Two contrasting interpretations of the interrelation between politics and anthropology have co-exist...
Today the ethical and normative concerns of everyday citizens are all too often sidelined from the s...
The problem of nature is arguably the central problem in Rousseau’s thought. It may be posed in the ...
Richard Hooker's theology of Law is rooted in a twofold argument: the systematic appropriation of th...
This article investigates the concept of law in Rousseau, analyzing if he defends the idea of natura...
What does Nature mean in the famous Aristotelian formula “man is, by nature, a political animal”?...
Advisors: Andrea Radasanu.Committee members: Andrea Radasanu; S. Adam Seagrave; Matthew J. Streb.Inc...
Conventionalism asserts that there are a variety of notions of justice, but no true one. The fundam...