Sunday, March 22, 2020
Hobbes And Rousseau On Good Essays - John Locke, Sovereignty
  Hobbes And Rousseau On Good    For one to be a good citizen, there are certain expectations a person must  follow to achieve this goal. While many people have their own ideas of what  makes a good citizen, there is little consensus to exactly what this would be.    Thomas Hobbes and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, in their books The Leviathan and The    Social Contract, create a system of political governing where the citizen plays  a certain role and has certain expectations to carry out this role for the  governmental system to work properly. In this paper, I will discuss what each of  the men believed to be the role of the average citizen to support the state.    Both men have quite different opinions in regards to the roles of citizens.    While both are good theories, and create a strong case for government, neither  is applicable in the real world because what is demanded of the citizen in these  systems of government is based on certain assumptions. The assumptions made by  these men, both good and bad, are not evident in the every day person. Thomas    Hobbes believes, that all men are egocentric, by nature. This is to say that men  spend their whole lives looking for what makes the happiest as an individual.    Even when men socialize, it is not for the benefit of building strong ties  between each other, but simply for personal benefit. Hobbes argues that man is  self- centered in nature because he desires power. This arises from the fact  that man, unlike animals, may seek things that are not tangible. Hobbes argues,  not only are men egocentric, but also equal. Hobbes believes that even though  every person may have different levels of strength, intelligence or character  that all men are equal. "For such is the nature of men that, howsoever they  may acknowledge many others to be more witty or more eloquent or more learned,  yet they will hardly believe there be so many so wise as themselves, for they  see their won wit at hand and other men's at a distance." (Leviathan, 98)    More importantly in dealing with equality, Hobbes believes no matter what power,  strength or intelligence one possesses, his vulnerability to be killed is the  same. Because man is egocentric, a man's ego, for the most part, will drive  his actions. Because of this, a cycle of competition will begin. This cycle of  competition can be summed up as the state of nature. In the state of nature,  where the strong survive, life is not very good. In the state of nature, man is  trying to fulfill certain needs, such as safety or life. Because of these common  needs, Hobbes believes man searches for peace. Peace is then achieved through a  social contract among the members of the society. Before the social contract to  even begin, man must find others willing to go along with it. This becomes  difficult because man is very untrusting in the state of nature. This distrust,  however, is overcome by the fear of death. A fear of death and of equal  vulnerability to it is common with all men and the driving force behind men  coming together to form a social contract. To create the social contract, every  person must give up the right to judge themselve's, and hand this power over  to a third party, the state. The state is founded on a common belief system held  my all the people in the new commonwealth. "The only way to erect such a  common power, is, to conferre all their power and strength upon one man, or upon  one assembly of men, that may reduce all their wills, by plurality of voices,  unto one will." (Leviathan, 227) The state is all-powerful and cannot be  challenged because the contract would then be broken. The only people that can  break the contract are those who agreed to it, therefore the state cannot break  the contract, because the state is a result of the contract. Now the Hobbes's  social contract has been created and agreed to by the citizens, there are  several things the citizens must do to support the state. The demands are  simple. A good citizen must obey the state and the laws the state makes. Hobbes  believes that citizens have an obligation to obey the government because all of  citizens agreed to give up the right to be judge in their own case. Once a  citizen has entered into this contract, the citizen's obligation to obey the  sovereign is absolute, with one limitation to be discusses later.    
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