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State of Nature or Eden?
Thomas Hobbes and His Contemporaries on the Natural Condition of Human Beings
Helen Thornton

State of Nature or Eden? Thomas Hobbes and his Contemporaries on the Natural Condition of Human Beings aims to explain how Hobbes' state of nature was understood by a contemporary readership, whose most important reference point for such a condition was the original condition of human beings at the creation, in other words in Eden. The book uses ideas about how readers brought their own reading of other texts to any reading, that reading is affected by the context in which the reader reads, and that the Bible was the model for all reading in the early modern period. It combines these ideas with the primary evidence of the contemporary critical reaction to Hobbes, to reconstruct how Hobbes' state of nature was read by his contemporaries. The book argues that what determined how Hobbes' seventeenth century readers responded to his description of the state of nature were their views on the effects of the Fall. Hobbes' contemporary critics, the majority of whom were Aristotelians and Arminians, thought that the Fall had corrupted human nature, although not to the extent implied by Hobbes' description. Further, they wanted to look at human beings as they should have been, or ought to be. Hobbes, on the other hand, wanted to look at human beings as they were, and in doing so was closer to Augustinian, Lutheran and Reformed interpretations, which argued that nature had been inverted by the Fall. For those of Hobbes' contemporaries who shared these theological assumptions, there were important parallels to be seen between Hobbes' account and that of scripture, although on some points his description could have been seen as a subversion of scripture. The book also demonstrates that Hobbes was working within the Protestant tradition, as well as showing how he used different aspects of this tradition.

Helen Thornton is an Independent Scholar. She completed her Ph.D. at the University of Hull.

 

DETAILS

264 pages
Size: 9 x 6
10 digit ISBN: 1580461964
13 digit ISBN: 9781580461962
Binding: Hardback
First published: 24/Jan/2005
Last reprinted: 24/Jan/2005
Price: 75.00 USD / 40.00 GBP Imprint: University of Rochester Press
Series: Rochester Studies in Philosophy
Subject: Philosophy

BIC class: AVH

STATUS: Available
Details updated on 02/09/2008
 
Contents
   Introduction
1   Good and Evil
2   Equality and Unsociability
3   The War of All Against All
4   The Right and Law of Nature
5   The Creation of Society
6   Conclusion
7   Notes
8   Bibliography
9   Index
 

 

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