Thomas Hobbes’ theory of punishment plays a constitutive role in the Leviathan’s theory of state sovereignty. Despite this, Hobbes’ justification for punishment is widely found to be discrepant, weak, inconsistent, and contradictory. Two dominant tendencies in the scholarship attempt to stabilize the Leviathan’s justification for the state’s right to punish by either identifying it with the sovereign’s right to war or by elaborating a theory of authorization within the state. In contrast, by tracing the deployments of the metaphor that Hobbes utilizes to evoke the state’s right to punish in the Leviathan (i.e. that of the nerves of the Leviathan) this paper finds that these two accounts can be made to be consistent with each other — thereb...
Contemporary debates on obedience and consent, such as those between Thomas Senor and A. John Simmon...
This commentary contends that Larry May’s Hobbesian argument for limitations on sovereignty and lawm...
Scholars debate whether Hobbes held to a command theory of law or to a natural law theory, and to wh...
Thomas Hobbes’ theory of punishment plays a constitutive role in the Leviathan’s theory of state sov...
This thesis delineates and resolves various puzzles which the right to self-defence (“RSD”) introduc...
Thomas Hobbes is notable as a philosopher not least for having grounded his political thought on his...
This dissertation constitutes a challenge to the orthodox interpretation of Thomas Hobbes’s theory o...
From the early period of intellectual discourse, philosophers and political writers have always thou...
Abstract Debates regarding obligation in Hobbes have turned on either natural right or natural law i...
Debates regarding obligation in Hobbes have turned on either natural right or natural law interpreta...
This essay closely examines Hobbes’ underexplored discussion of legal theory in the Leviathan, and a...
Is it coherent to speak of a right to resist justified punishment? Thomas Hobbes thought so. This es...
This essay closely examines Hobbes’ underexplored discussion of legal theory in the Leviathan, and a...
In Leviathan, the book which is the culmination of his political philosophy, Hobbes develops a form ...
textThe modern criminal justice system is experiencing what may be called a moral crisis brought abo...
Contemporary debates on obedience and consent, such as those between Thomas Senor and A. John Simmon...
This commentary contends that Larry May’s Hobbesian argument for limitations on sovereignty and lawm...
Scholars debate whether Hobbes held to a command theory of law or to a natural law theory, and to wh...
Thomas Hobbes’ theory of punishment plays a constitutive role in the Leviathan’s theory of state sov...
This thesis delineates and resolves various puzzles which the right to self-defence (“RSD”) introduc...
Thomas Hobbes is notable as a philosopher not least for having grounded his political thought on his...
This dissertation constitutes a challenge to the orthodox interpretation of Thomas Hobbes’s theory o...
From the early period of intellectual discourse, philosophers and political writers have always thou...
Abstract Debates regarding obligation in Hobbes have turned on either natural right or natural law i...
Debates regarding obligation in Hobbes have turned on either natural right or natural law interpreta...
This essay closely examines Hobbes’ underexplored discussion of legal theory in the Leviathan, and a...
Is it coherent to speak of a right to resist justified punishment? Thomas Hobbes thought so. This es...
This essay closely examines Hobbes’ underexplored discussion of legal theory in the Leviathan, and a...
In Leviathan, the book which is the culmination of his political philosophy, Hobbes develops a form ...
textThe modern criminal justice system is experiencing what may be called a moral crisis brought abo...
Contemporary debates on obedience and consent, such as those between Thomas Senor and A. John Simmon...
This commentary contends that Larry May’s Hobbesian argument for limitations on sovereignty and lawm...
Scholars debate whether Hobbes held to a command theory of law or to a natural law theory, and to wh...