The Difference Between Socrates And Hobbes

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The Supreme Court decision in Humanitarian Law Project v. Eric Holder, Jr. ruled that it was possible to limit the organization’s activities without infringing on their constitutional rights. Given that Socrates believes that governments are not infallible in upholding justice, and Hobbes that a government is incapable of injustice, Socrates would deem the Court’s decision unjust while Hobbes would claim that it is just. I am inclined to support Socrates’s reasoning over Hobbes’s, as I find that Socrates depicts the natures and relationship of sovereignty and justice more realistically, whereas Hobbes presents a more idealized version of government..
Socrates and Hobbes are not wholly different in their perspectives. They agree on the purpose …show more content…

Socrates finds law to be ambiguous and values the intent of the accused in deciding whether laws have been broken, whereas Hobbes is certain that the law is absolute and is not subject to varied interpretations from subjects of the sovereign. Socrates feels that the terminology of the law is open to the interpretation of a government’s subjects, and finds that a person’s intentions should be considered when deciding their guilt. In his defense against accusations of his impiety, Socrates shows that ambiguous legal terminology makes the law unclear. He says that by investigating the legitimacy of the Oracle’s proclamation, he is actually performing a religious duty. Although his definition of piety differs from that of his sovereign, Socrates believes that his interpretation absolves him of any of the perceived malevolence of his actions, and that as such, there would be no justice in punishing him. Socrates finds that intent is a factor in deciding guiltiness, and that if the law is not broken willfully, the duty of the sovereign is not punishment. In the case of the Humanitarian Law Project’s desire to interact with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Elam (LTTE) and Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), the group claimed that they did not have any wish to act maliciously if they could legally collaborate with the LTTE and PKK. The HLP’s goals were to “provide support …show more content…

Socrates has a more realistic view of the government, in that it is composed of people every bit as fallible as those they govern. Hobbes finds that the government is incapable of injustice as perceived by its subjects, but not consider the limitations of a government’s knowledge of justice and holds the government to unreasonable standards of perfection. These views would make Hobbes support the Court’s decision while Socrates would doubt it, and I would side with Socrates, if only because I know that no legal system can be as perfect as Hobbes would like to

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