Hobbes State Of Nature Analysis

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Hobbes describes the State of Nature as a state where all men are equal, since one individual can kill another individual. With this state of inequality, he claims that this equality has an “equality of hope” in accomplishing one’s ends. If two men seek the same end, and only one can have it, the two men would be enemies and would seek to “destroy or subdue one another” (Hobbes 1651, 2). Hobbes goes further to claim that men are not obliged in “keeping company where there is no power able to overawe them all” (Hobbes 1651, 2).
Hobbes gives three causes for a quarrel between men: competition, diffidence, and glory. From these spawns the State of War which comes when there is not “a common power to keep them all in awe...” (Hobbes 1651, 3). …show more content…

He also states that men are “perfectly free to order their actions, and dispose of their possessions and themselves…” and are “subject only to limits set by the law of nature” (Locke 2005, 3). Locke then diverges from Hobbes with the claim that although men are in a state of liberty, this does not grant license to do whatsoever the wish without restraint. Man cannot destroy himself or his possessions “unless something nobler than its mere preservation is at stake” (Locke 2005, 4). Since men in the State of Nature are equal, one cannot rightfully “harm anyone else in his life, health, liberty, or possessions” (Locke 2005, 4). Enforcing this natural law is within everyone’s power, meaning they have authority to punish those who violate that natural law. He uses this to show how one man could have conditional power over another (in carrying out a just punishment for the …show more content…

Man then began to make progress with tools (bows, clothing, etc.). This led to states of minor dependence on others. We then see the dawn of the family unit. Humans started living together in societies and “…began to value one another…” (Rousseau 1755, 26). This particular society is deemed best by Rousseau as “they lived free, healthy, honest and happy lives, so long as their nature allowed” and thinks men were meant to remain in that state (Rousseau 1755). This society eventually led to the formation of society, further leading to a “decrepitude of the species” (Rousseau 1755,

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