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THE CONCEPT OF THE POLITICAL IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF THOMAS HOBBES
Author(s) -
Bachuki Tsanava
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
političeskaâ èkspertiza
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2618-9577
pISSN - 1818-4499
DOI - 10.21638/spbu23.2020.305
Subject(s) - political philosophy , deliberation , epistemology , politics , state of nature , state (computer science) , philosophy , argument (complex analysis) , social philosophy , sociology , law , social science , political science , social relation , computer science , biochemistry , chemistry , algorithm
The article is devoted to the concept of the political in the philosophy of English thinker Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679). The author points out the key concepts for understanding the concept of the political in Hobbes’s philosophy, such as the method of his philosophy, anthropological views, and the idea of the state of nature. The author describes the philosopher’s thought path toward the concept of the political, beginning from his attempt to overcome the shortcomings of contemporary philosophy and the desire to create a science of politics, based on rational deliberation. Hobbes contrasts elocution with his method of searching for political truth based on reason because there is more harm than good done to the state by elocution. In the hands of selfish and vain individuals, elocution turns into an instrument for achieving personal goals rather than the common good. Hobbes’s anthropological views allow him to describe all the horror and injustice in the state of nature, in which any selfish, but reasonable person, using the right method will come to the idea of the need to establish a state. The author notes that the concepts of vanity and fear occupied a particularly important place in Hobbes’s philosophy, since they are the reasons for the collapse and creation of states. Thus, the concept of the political in Hobbes’s philosophy is inseparable from deliberation based on reason, since without it selfish individuals cannot hear the voice of reason, establish the Leviathan, and proceed to the political condition. The social con- tract, obtained as a result of rational deliberation of egoistic individuals, represents the pinnacle of the political because neither the political condition nor citizens existed before it.