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| 241. |
Plato Vs. Hobbes
(10 Pages, 119.5 USD)
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A 10 page, critical comparison of views presented by Plato in 'The Republic' and by Hobbes in 'Leviathan' as they relate to evaluative assessments of various governmental forms & political theory. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
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Paper Keywords -otalp
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| 242. |
Plato vs. Hobbes # 2
(6 Pages, 71.7 USD)
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A 6 page analytical comparison of views on Democracy and the state as argued by Plato in his 'Republic' and Hobbes in 'Leviathan.' No additional bibliographic references.
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Paper Keywords -otalp
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| 243. |
Thomas Hobbes / Metaphysics & Politics
(6 Pages, 71.7 USD)
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A 6 page paper that provides an overview of Hobbes metaphysical considerations as they relate to both politics and religion and considers these elements in terms of Hobbes' Leviathan. No additional sources cited.
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Paper Keywords -sebbho
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| 244. |
Thomas Hobbes & The Expression Of Human Experience
(5 Pages, 59.75 USD)
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A 5 page paper on the views and Philosophies of Thomas Hobbes. The writer provides a brief history on Hobbes' life, but mainly talkes about his political and social beleifs. Bibliography included.
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| 246. |
War is Inevitable
(14 Pages, 167.3 USD)
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A 14 page paper which addresses the inevitability of war. The first portion of the paper is examined using Thomas Hobbes' work 'Of the First and Second Natural Laws, and of Contracts.' The inherent nature of man is to protect himself at all costs. This is our way of surviving. We have not gotten this far in the evolutionary chain by giving in to the controls of others. Even those of us who do not wish to fight, will do so when directly threatened, or when our families are directly threatened. While we might like to imagine a world where there is no such thing as war, the realities of our species and of life itself, prove otherwise. The second portion of the paper discusses the inevitability of war based on Hobbes' theory of government, which is essentially just a larger group of people with the same need to protect. This section details portions of the works titled 'Of the Natural Condition of Mankind As Concerning their Felicity and Misery' and 'The Elements of Law Natural and Political.' In the third section all of the theories are essentially summed up in relationship to Hobbes' theories involving teh inevitablity of war. No additional sources cited.
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Paper Keywords -Levlost.wps
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| 247. |
Hobbes and the Nature of Man
(4 Pages, 47.8 USD)
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A 4 page paper discussing Thomas Hobbes' philosophy of the nature of man contrasted with that of St. Augustine. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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Paper Keywords -sebbho, santaug
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| 248. |
The Leviathan State of Nature
(4 Pages, 47.8 USD)
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A 4 page essay examining how Thomas Hobbes' state of nature is an 'inference from the passions' of human kind. When Hobbes discovered Euclid's methods of logic, he set about examining the need for and the inevitability of the existence of government using Euclid's methods. Hobbes began with three basic assumptions from which to build: (1) justice and morality were products of government, not innate qualities of man; (2) all human motivation springs either from the desire for personal pleasure or the fear of pain; and (3) while there are physical and mental differences between individuals, those differences pale in connection with membership in a group. Under the last assumption, anyone was capable of overpowering any other one at any time. Hobbes concluded that in a state of nature, life would be every man against every man.
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Paper Keywords -sebbho
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| 249. |
Hobbes & Burke / Two Founders Of Modern Conservatism
(8 Pages, 95.6 USD)
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An 8 page paper that considers the claim that Hobbes and Burke, -though there are few similarities in the views they expressed-, share the role as founders of modern conservatism and compares their views on man, human nature and government with the views of liberals like Mill and Locke. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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| 250. |
How Francis Bacon Influenced Thomas Hobbes
(7 Pages, 83.65 USD)
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A 7 page paper that discusses the impact that Francis Bacon had on the development of writings by Thomas Hobbes. Though Hobbes has denied, by omission, any correlation between the development of his philosophical theories and the year he spent in the employee of Francis Bacon, critics and philosophical scholars alike have compared their similarities and commented that the relationship between these two men must have been the springboard for Hobbes focal transformation from classical literature to social philosophy.
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Paper Keywords -facon
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