Hobbes’s views on church–state relations go well beyond Erastianism. Rather than claiming that the state holds supremacy over the church, Hobbes argued that church and state are identical in Christian commonwealths. This chapter shows that Hobbes advanced two distinct arguments for the church–state identity thesis over time. Both arguments are of considerable interest. The argument found in De Cive explains how the sovereign unifies a multitude of Christians into one personified church—without, intriguingly, any appeal to representation. Leviathan’s argument is premised on the sovereign’s authorized representation of Christian subjects. Authorization explains why, from Leviathan onwards, full sacerdotal powers are ex officio attributed to t...
Hobbesian reading of the Bible is articulated on two levels. It is from a careful scriptural analysi...
This essay proposes an interpretation of the Christian theological discourse developed in Thomas Ho...
Hobbes' argument in Leviathan can be viewed as a response to the question of why rational human bein...
This dissertation investigates the influence of theology on Hobbes’s concept of political representa...
Few aspects of Hobbes’s thought received as much recent attention as his religion; yet there are no ...
This article aspires to make two original contributions to the vast literature on Hobbes’s account o...
The relationship between politics and religion has always been the focus of Hobbesian literature, wh...
Though Thomas Hobbes’ Leviathan has been analyzed thoroughly by students of political theory, few sc...
What motivated an absolutist Erastian who rejected religious freedom, defended uniform public worshi...
ABSTRACTIn Leviathan, Hobbes outlines the concept of the ‘Kingdome of God by Nature’ or ‘Naturall Ki...
Several decades ago Carl Schmitt proposed an account of Thomas Hobbes’s theory of state in terms of ...
This essay closely examines Hobbes’ underexplored discussion of legal theory in the Leviathan, and a...
Abstract Until recently, scholars paid relatively little attention to chapter 23 of Leviathan, ...
Hobbes asserts that political power no longer needs to be founded on religious charisma (as argued b...
Although Hobbes' understanding of the sovereign's position in a state and Descartes' understanding o...
Hobbesian reading of the Bible is articulated on two levels. It is from a careful scriptural analysi...
This essay proposes an interpretation of the Christian theological discourse developed in Thomas Ho...
Hobbes' argument in Leviathan can be viewed as a response to the question of why rational human bein...
This dissertation investigates the influence of theology on Hobbes’s concept of political representa...
Few aspects of Hobbes’s thought received as much recent attention as his religion; yet there are no ...
This article aspires to make two original contributions to the vast literature on Hobbes’s account o...
The relationship between politics and religion has always been the focus of Hobbesian literature, wh...
Though Thomas Hobbes’ Leviathan has been analyzed thoroughly by students of political theory, few sc...
What motivated an absolutist Erastian who rejected religious freedom, defended uniform public worshi...
ABSTRACTIn Leviathan, Hobbes outlines the concept of the ‘Kingdome of God by Nature’ or ‘Naturall Ki...
Several decades ago Carl Schmitt proposed an account of Thomas Hobbes’s theory of state in terms of ...
This essay closely examines Hobbes’ underexplored discussion of legal theory in the Leviathan, and a...
Abstract Until recently, scholars paid relatively little attention to chapter 23 of Leviathan, ...
Hobbes asserts that political power no longer needs to be founded on religious charisma (as argued b...
Although Hobbes' understanding of the sovereign's position in a state and Descartes' understanding o...
Hobbesian reading of the Bible is articulated on two levels. It is from a careful scriptural analysi...
This essay proposes an interpretation of the Christian theological discourse developed in Thomas Ho...
Hobbes' argument in Leviathan can be viewed as a response to the question of why rational human bein...