Few aspects of Hobbes’s thought received as much recent attention as his religion; yet there are no comprehensive analyses of Hobbes’s biblical exegesis. To illustrate a possible method and the value of such studies, this article traces Hobbes’s strings of references in Leviathan, Part III. It shows that despite ascribing the authority to finalise, censor, and otherwise control biblical editions to the Sovereign, Hobbes preferred the Geneva to the King James Bible. The article also considers some implications of Hobbes’s Bible interpretations for the constitutional design of his Christian Commonwealth, including representation, the Christian Sovereign, anticlericalism, and the Second Coming
Vanhoutte Maurice. F. C. Hood, The Divine Politics of Thomas Hobbes. An Interpretation of Leviathan....
Thesis advisor: David M. RasmussenLeviathan drawn out by its tail: The religious ideas of the second...
Scholars of Thomas Hobbes can be loosely divided into two camps: those who believe Hobbes retained s...
Hobbes’s views on church–state relations go well beyond Erastianism. Rather than claiming that the s...
Though Thomas Hobbes’ Leviathan has been analyzed thoroughly by students of political theory, few sc...
Hobbesian reading of the Bible is articulated on two levels. It is from a careful scriptural analysi...
This dissertation investigates the influence of theology on Hobbes’s concept of political representa...
The question this essay sets out to answer is what role God plays in Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan, in t...
ABSTRACTIn Leviathan, Hobbes outlines the concept of the ‘Kingdome of God by Nature’ or ‘Naturall Ki...
To understand Hobbes’s handling of Christian scripture in Part 3 of Leviathan we need to see it in t...
This article aspires to make two original contributions to the vast literature on Hobbes’s account o...
This essay closely examines Hobbes’ underexplored discussion of legal theory in the Leviathan, and a...
This essay closely examines Hobbes’ underexplored discussion of legal theory in the Leviathan, and a...
The relationship between politics and religion has always been the focus of Hobbesian literature, wh...
Hobbes asserts that political power no longer needs to be founded on religious charisma (as argued b...
Vanhoutte Maurice. F. C. Hood, The Divine Politics of Thomas Hobbes. An Interpretation of Leviathan....
Thesis advisor: David M. RasmussenLeviathan drawn out by its tail: The religious ideas of the second...
Scholars of Thomas Hobbes can be loosely divided into two camps: those who believe Hobbes retained s...
Hobbes’s views on church–state relations go well beyond Erastianism. Rather than claiming that the s...
Though Thomas Hobbes’ Leviathan has been analyzed thoroughly by students of political theory, few sc...
Hobbesian reading of the Bible is articulated on two levels. It is from a careful scriptural analysi...
This dissertation investigates the influence of theology on Hobbes’s concept of political representa...
The question this essay sets out to answer is what role God plays in Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan, in t...
ABSTRACTIn Leviathan, Hobbes outlines the concept of the ‘Kingdome of God by Nature’ or ‘Naturall Ki...
To understand Hobbes’s handling of Christian scripture in Part 3 of Leviathan we need to see it in t...
This article aspires to make two original contributions to the vast literature on Hobbes’s account o...
This essay closely examines Hobbes’ underexplored discussion of legal theory in the Leviathan, and a...
This essay closely examines Hobbes’ underexplored discussion of legal theory in the Leviathan, and a...
The relationship between politics and religion has always been the focus of Hobbesian literature, wh...
Hobbes asserts that political power no longer needs to be founded on religious charisma (as argued b...
Vanhoutte Maurice. F. C. Hood, The Divine Politics of Thomas Hobbes. An Interpretation of Leviathan....
Thesis advisor: David M. RasmussenLeviathan drawn out by its tail: The religious ideas of the second...
Scholars of Thomas Hobbes can be loosely divided into two camps: those who believe Hobbes retained s...