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Compare And Contrast Enlightenment And Hobbes

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Hobbes and Locke, The Black and White of The Enlightenment

In a time when ignorance and superstition plagued the lands, only the brightest of thinkers could enlighten the masses. After the scientific revolution, thinkers started utilizing reason to unveil the natural laws that governed human behavior. Thus, marking the commencement of a period called the Age of Reason. After witnessing the immense feats conquered by the likes of Newton, thinkers thought that implementing the concepts of the scientific method could reveal laws about humankind. Among the elite of those thinkers were John Locke and Thomas Hobbes. Locke and Hobbes are renowned philosophical personalities whose works have had a preponderant influence on the development of modern …show more content…

After the English revolution, English thinkers, Locke and Hobbes, emerged as exceptional thinkers who had conflicting perspectives about the role of government and human nature. Nevertheless, both philosophers were evidently similar in their approach to this predicament. They supported the use of reason to produce judgments on the role of monarchs in society. The logic behind their discretions was to identify what was good in initial human nature and what was lost once an individual entered society( "Locke and Hobbes, Two Contrasting Views”). With all this in account, the philosophers strongly believed that all men are equal. Also, Hobbes testified the existence of a social contract between the ruler and the ruled. Similarly, Locke confirmed the actuality of this social contract and agreed with Hobbes that the purpose of government was to create order and stability (Beers …show more content…

On one hand, Hobbes had a more pessimistic inference of human nature and thought that it was principally bad. In his work, The Leviathan, he suggests, as said before, that all men are equal, but he argues that this equality brews the desire of obtaining something. Sometimes, this thing can only be attained and enjoyed by one person. Consequently, people become enemies. Furthermore, he insists that without a common power to maintain them, they are in a condition called war. This conflict-provoking state leaves no room for productivity and prosperity, proclaims Hobbes (Collier 15). On the contrary, Locke, generally, thought that people were essentially reasonable and would collaborate with one another. In his work, Of Civil Government, Locke writes that men living according to reason, without a common authority to decide between them, is properly the state of nature. Additionally, he argues that God has given man reason to exploit and thereby achieve optimal convenience. Likewise, he thinks that nothing made by God is created to be damaged or spoiled, so, he claims, that there is room for conflict if reason is exercised (Collier

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