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Hobbes ' Leviath Human Desire

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Jaime Rivas
POL 004 Essay 2
Human Desire In Hobbes’ Leviathan, man’s nature is given an arguably pessimistic description by Hobbes, “So that in the first place, I put for a general inclination of all mankind, a perpetual and restless desire of power after power, that ceaseth only in death” (58). This conclusion of man’s nature comes as the logical end point of his discussion of bodies in motion, power and other aspects of human nature. The description of man’s nature by Hobbes’ also becomes the fundamental base for his argument for the state of nature being a “state of war” or even a war of “all against all”. Hobbes’ man and his nature is the fundamental basis for the creation of Hobbes’ Leviathan in response to the state of constant war …show more content…

These ideas of good and evil with our desires and aversions become the basis for Hobbes’ idea of power which is “The power of a man (to take it universally) is his present means to obtain some future apparent good”(50[1]). This interpretation of power by Hobbes states that the idea of power is the ability to obtain objects which are good to you for the future or to state simply, it is to have a present means to gain future desires. So, power by Hobbes terms is anything that aids you in gaining objects of your desire either in the present or in the future, and it is this power which is man’s main appetite according to Hobbes. From this restless appetite comes Hobbes’ description of man’s nature of restless desire. Hobbes’ description of man’s nature as a restless desire for power is the central foundation for the creation of Hobbes’ state of nature. Life in what is considered a state of nature is the nature in the condition without government. Hobbes states the scenario as “the condition of mere nature”(84[18]), a state where no authority exist other than whatever authority, privacy, security or power an individual is able to gain privately by themselves. Under this state of nature Hobbes assigns man a right of preservation of themselves which he calls “the right of nature”(79[1]) where “each man hath to use

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