Reforming the Law of Nature: The Secularization of Political Thought, 1532–1689. By Simon P. Kennedy
In: A journal of church and state: JCS, Volume 65, Issue 4, p. 462-464
ISSN: 2040-4867
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In: A journal of church and state: JCS, Volume 65, Issue 4, p. 462-464
ISSN: 2040-4867
In: History of European ideas, Volume 50, Issue 3, p. 563-565
ISSN: 0191-6599
In: The review of politics, Volume 84, Issue 3, p. 481-484
ISSN: 1748-6858
In: Hobbes studies, Volume 33, Issue 2, p. 196-200
ISSN: 1875-0257
In: Modern intellectual history: MIH, Volume 12, Issue 1, p. 95-120
ISSN: 1479-2451
The publication of the Clarendon edition of theWorks of Thomas Hobbesrecently entered its fourth decade. The monumental project has unfolded against shifting methodologies in the practice of intellectual history, and the edition's own history exemplifies these shifts. Its first general editor was Howard Warrender, who died in 1985 after a distinguished career as a professor of political theory at the University of Sheffield. Warrender was best known for thePolitical Philosophy of Hobbes: His Theory of Obligation. This influential book offered a deontological interpretation of Hobbes's theory of obligation, according to which the Hobbesian natural laws were to be understood as divine commands. Warrender's book appeared in 1957 and was resolutely textualist in its approach, exploring Hobbes's arguments in isolation and with considerable interpretive charity. His subject was the "theoretical basis" of Hobbes's writing, the importance of which might not be "historically conspicuous."
In: Canada and International Affairs
Introduction -- Chapter 1: How Canada Procures for the Military -- Chapter 2: "Clearly, we're not competent" – Joint Support Ships -- Chapter 3: "Delivery Expected as Soon as Possible" - Standard Military Pattern Trucks -- Chapter 4: "Tortured and Long Delayed" – Fixed-Wing Search and Rescue Airplanes -- Chapter 5: "A No Fail Mission" - Modernizing the Frigates -- Conclusion.
In: Ideas in context 127
"The books in this series will discuss the emergence of intellectual traditions and of related new disciplines. The procedures, aims and vocabularies that were generated will be set in the context of the alternatives available within the contemporary frameworks of ideas and institutions. Through detailed studies of the evolution of such traditions, and their modification by different audiences, it is hoped that a new picture will form of the development of ideas in their concrete contexts. By this means, artificial distinctions between the history of philosophy, of the various sciences, of society and politics, and of literature may be seen to dissolve"--
In: Ideas in context, 127
Thomas Hobbes and John Locke sit together in the canon of political thought but are rarely treated in common historical accounts. This book narrates their intertwined careers during the Restoration period, when the two men found themselves in close proximity and entangled in many of the same political conflicts. Bringing new source material to bear, In the Shadow of Leviathan establishes the influence of Hobbesian thought over Locke, particularly in relation to the preeminent question of religious toleration. Excavating Hobbes's now forgotten case for a prudent, politique toleration gifted by sovereign power, Jeffrey R. Collins argues that modern, liberal thinking about toleration was transformed by Locke's gradual emancipation from this Hobbesian mode of thought. This book investigates those landmark events - the civil war, Restoration, the popish plot, the Revolution of 1688 - which eventually forced Locke to confront the limits of politique toleration, and to devise an account of religious freedom as an inalienable right.
In: Ideas in context 127
Thomas Hobbes and John Locke sit together in the canon of political thought but are rarely treated in common historical accounts. This book narrates their intertwined careers during the Restoration period, when the two men found themselves in close proximity and entangled in many of the same political conflicts. Bringing new source material to bear, In the Shadow of Leviathan establishes the influence of Hobbesian thought over Locke, particularly in relation to the preeminent question of religious toleration. Excavating Hobbes's now forgotten case for a prudent, politique toleration gifted by sovereign power, Jeffrey R. Collins argues that modern, liberal thinking about toleration was transformed by Locke's gradual emancipation from this Hobbesian mode of thought. This book investigates those landmark events - the civil war, Restoration, the popish plot, the Revolution of 1688 - which eventually forced Locke to confront the limits of politique toleration, and to devise an account of religious freedom as an inalienable right.
Thomas Hobbes and the uses of Christianity -- Hobbes, the long parliament, and the Church of England -- Rise of the independents -- Leviathan and the Cromwellian revolution -- Hobbes among the Cromwellians -- The independents and the 'Religion of Thomas Hobbes' -- Response of the exiled church.
In: The review of politics, Volume 81, Issue 4, p. 673-688
ISSN: 1748-6858
Near the start of her fascinating new bookThe Lost History of Liberalism, Helena Rosenblatt dryly observes that "available histories of liberalism are seldom helpful" (2). The point is well taken: the historiography of liberalism—largely written as intellectual history—is not particularly coherent, and has only sporadically adopted sound historical methodology. The genre emerged relatively late. The proliferation of the language of liberalism in the nineteenth century, not least in party politics, did not produce theoretically informed historical accounts of particular note. A historiography of liberalism really only developed in response to the perceived "crisis of liberalism" of the early twentieth century. Guido de Ruggiero's 1925The History of European Liberalismwas written in a Hegelian idealist tradition, according to which liberalism was an "organic development of freedom coinciding with the organization of human society and its progressively higher and more spiritual forms." Coming from a different direction was Harold Laski'sThe Rise of European Liberalism: An Essay in Interpretation,published in 1936. Laski's liberalism was as much a "habit of mind" as a set of doctrines, with a complex history making both "clarity difficult" and "precision unattainable." An essentialized understanding of liberalism was nevertheless still at work. Laski's liberalism was that the individualist, utilitarian mode of thought necessary to an emerging capitalist society. "The liberal creed, in a word," he wrote, "is a doctrine woven from the texture of bourgeois need."
In: Proceedings of the annual meeting / American Society of International Law, Volume 108, p. 8-11
ISSN: 2169-1118
In: Hobbes studies, Volume 26, Issue 1, p. 6-33
ISSN: 1875-0257
In the later years of his life, Thomas Hobbes developed an intense interest in the history of Christian heresy, an interest which informed half a dozen of his manuscripts and publications. These heresy writings have typically been studied within the context of Restoration church politics. This article offers a broader account of the significance of these writings. It reads them as extensions of Hobbes's longstanding project of theological reform. Hobbes's heresy writings were not merely intended to defend him from prosecution under English law. They also constituted an audacious and risky reassertion of the assault on Trinitarian orthodoxy that Hobbes had supposedly retracted in the Latin translation of Leviathan. The article concludes by considering what this interpretation might tell us about Hobbes's vacillating commitment to religious toleration.
In: Modern intellectual history: MIH, Volume 6, Issue 2, p. 343-367
ISSN: 1479-2451
For nearly half a century, Quentin Skinner has been the world's foremost interpreter of Thomas Hobbes. When the contextualist mode of intellectual history now known as the "Cambridge School" was first asserting itself in the 1960s, the life and writings of John Locke were the primary topic for pioneers such as Peter Laslett and John Dunn. At that time, Hobbes was still the plaything of philosophers and political scientists, virtually all of whom wrote in an ahistorical, textual-analytic manner. Hobbes had not been the subject of serious contextual research for decades, since the foundational writings of Ferdinand Tönnies. For Skinner, he was thus an ideal subject, providing a space for original research on a major figure, and an occasion for some polemically charged methodological manifestos. Both of these purposes animated his 1965 article "History and Ideology in the English Revolution," and his 1966 article "The Ideological Context of Hobbes's Political Thought". The latter of these remains to this day one of the most widely cited scholarly articles in the fifty-year run of Cambridge'sHistorical Journal. Among other results of these early efforts was the scholarly controversy during which Howard Warrender chided Skinner for having reduced the "classic texts in political philosophy" to mere "tracts for the times".