Wojna i władza w filozofii politycznej Hobbesa

Autor

  • Sebastian Michalik

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14394/etyka.412

Abstrakt

The subject of this article are two fundamental concepts of Hobbes’ political philosophy: “war of all against all” and political power. The analysis of anthropological basis of Hobbes’ political theory is of crucial importance for these considerations. It shows that the state of nature and the political state create dialectical relationship, not an insurmountable opposition. The further exploration leads to the conclusion that the sovereign power is identical with the rights and brutal actions of the individual living in the state of nature. In other words, political state is merely a continuation of conflicts taking place in the “war of all against all”. In order to conceal this fact Hobbes provides the sovereign power with the ideological effect of objectivity. The power based in sheer violence is masked as Leviathan who exists in the minds of its subject, creating an illusion of a cohesive social order devoid of any antagonisms and, therefore, objective.

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Opublikowane

2003-12-01

Jak cytować

Michalik, Sebastian. 2003. „Wojna I władza W Filozofii Politycznej Hobbesa”. Etyka 36 (grudzień). Warsaw, Poland:137-57. https://doi.org/10.14394/etyka.412.

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