|
The
Philosophy of
Thomas
Hobbes
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
I.
General Notions
Hobbes' system is a synthesis of Empiricism and
Rationalism. The fundamental points of Hobbes'
doctrine are:
- (1) All reality is matter and derived from
matter;
- (2) Matter is endowed with intrinsic
movement;
- (3) Intellectual, moral and political life
are the object of mathematical calculus, and
hence are made up of nothing but combinations of
matter in motion.
II.
Life and Works
Thomas Hobbes (picture)
was born in Malmesbury in 1588. He was educated at
Oxford University, which was at the time a center
of nominalistic Scholasticism. As tutor for a noble
English family he had opportunities for travel. At
Florence he came into contact with the thought of
Galileo; in France he knew Mersenne, the great
friend of Descartes. It was Mersenne who induced
Hobbes to write his critical observations on the
Meditations of Descartes.
Hobbes returned to England in 1637 with the
intention of writing. When the struggle between
Parliament and the King broke out, Hobbes, who was
a supporter of the absolute monarchy, retired to
France, where he lived for ten years. Granted an
amnesty, he returned to England in 1651 and was
reconciled with Cromwell. When Charles II, whom
Hobbes had tutored, ascended the throne, the King
granted a pension to his former teacher. Hobbes
died in 1679, having lived beyond the age of
ninety.
Thomas Hobbes wrote one great philosophical
work, which he divided into sections and published
at three different times: De cive (On the
Social and Political Organism), a work that was
further developed and later published under the
title The Leviathan; De corpore (On the
Body); and De homine (On Man). The vigorous
thought of Hobbes made a deep impression in his
native country and abroad. The Leviathan is
generally considered his masterpiece.
III.
Theory of Knowledge
The whole of human knowledge is contained within
the limits of sensation. Sensations are due to an
external movement which generates an internal
reaction in our organism. Concepts are
representations of qualities common to several
distinct sensations, which in speech are expressed
by a common name (Nominalism). The mind operates on
such concepts through analysis and synthesis,
composing and dividing them into their elements.
For example, by adding the concept of animality to
that of rationality, we have the concept
man; by subtracting from the concept man the
concept of rationality, we have the concept
animal. This system is pure mechanical
nominalism.
Nevertheless, Hobbes does not deny the value of
science, of knowledge of abstract causes. This
science will be attained in fact as soon as we have
an analytical knowledge of the elements and a
synthetic understanding of their combinations. Thus
Hobbes believed that he had saved science as an
absolute value, even though such a value is only
phenomenal, being an operation of the mind and not
an objective contact with external reality.
IV.
Metaphysics
Of the two Cartesian substances, Hobbes accepts
extended material substance and denies the
spiritual; or, rather, he makes the spiritual
substance a derivative of material substance.
Matter is not passive, as it was for Descartes. On
the contrary, it is endowed with motion, and this
motion is from within. Thus for Hobbes there are
two metaphysical elements: matter and motion, which
can be reduced to one, dynamic matter. The
intrinsic motion of matter has given origin to the
diversity of the inorganic and organic world. Life
is thus a product of matter and motion, and the
human soul is a composite of very subtle atoms.
Hobbes does not deny the existence of God, but
he is decidedly opposed to any positive revealed
religion, including Christianity.
Even the moral life does not exceed the limits
of matter and of motion. Sensations, passing to the
heart, generate pleasure and hate, that is,
inclinations and repulsions. Men naturally tend to
pleasure considered as a form of self-satisfaction.
But such a tendency must be rationalized by
calculation, in order that it may bring greater
pleasure. This is possible only in the state.
V.
Politics
The civil state, that is, the result of the
passage of primitive man from the state of nature
to a social life, derives from a contract the
purpose of which is to procure the greatest
possible pleasure, a pleasure which could not be
had in the state of nature. The state of nature in
which man lived before the formation of society,
was founded on a savage egoism which drove man to
secure a maximum of pleasure without hindrance from
a norm of justice or mercy toward other men ("homo
homini lupus est"). Every man was continually
engaged in war against all other men ("bellum
universale").
With the dawn of reason, man understood that he
could not live in eternal warfare and that if he
wished to satisfy his instinct of egoism he must
seek peace ("pax quaerenda"). The means of
attaining peace consisted in man's ceding his
natural rights ("jus non retinendum") in favor of
an authority which would ensure this peace and
allow the greatest possible pleasure. Once man had
ceded his rights to this authority, he was bound to
obey ("pactis standum").
This contract having been made, authority came
into being in the person of the sovereign, who had
not ceded his natural rights. The members of the
state, then, have given up their rights in favor of
the ruler, while the ruler alone still enjoys the
same unlimited and absolute power which belonged to
all men in their primitive condition. The ruler
must retain this power if he is to have the
authority and strength to dominate the instincts
and passions of individuals and to ensure the
maximum of good for all.
This massing together of individuals, dominated
by force, is the state, the symbol of which Hobbes
believed he had found in the monstrous Biblical
animal, the leviathan, which was capable of
devouring all other animals. Thus Hobbes named his
greatest work The Leviathan.
In The Radical
Academy
Elsewhere On the
Internet
Enrich
Your Life With a Philosophy Book...
Enrich
Your Life With a Philosophy
Magazine...
|