Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Hobbes's Theory of Will

View through CrossRef
In Hobbes's Theory of the Will, Jurgen Overhoff reveals the religious, ethical, and political consequences of Thomas Hobbes's doctrine of volition. The author gracefully describes how Hobbes's thought was governed by assumptions based firmly in Galilean natural philosophy and orthodox Protestant theology. Overhoff also demonstrates how his subject used materialist eschatology and an absolutist political theory to resolve the social and ethical predicaments that coincided with these assumptions. Finally, Overhoff provides a chronological study of the numerous philosophical, theological, religious and political aspects of Hobbes's idea of the will and situates Hobbes's doctrine within the context of the most important responses and objections put forward by his critics.
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Title: Hobbes's Theory of Will
Description:
In Hobbes's Theory of the Will, Jurgen Overhoff reveals the religious, ethical, and political consequences of Thomas Hobbes's doctrine of volition.
The author gracefully describes how Hobbes's thought was governed by assumptions based firmly in Galilean natural philosophy and orthodox Protestant theology.
Overhoff also demonstrates how his subject used materialist eschatology and an absolutist political theory to resolve the social and ethical predicaments that coincided with these assumptions.
Finally, Overhoff provides a chronological study of the numerous philosophical, theological, religious and political aspects of Hobbes's idea of the will and situates Hobbes's doctrine within the context of the most important responses and objections put forward by his critics.

Related Results

Hobbes on Sex
Hobbes on Sex
Abstract Contemporary scholars have largely dismissed Hobbes’s brief, and somewhat scattered, remarks about gender and sexuality as peripheral to his central concern...
Hobbes on Justice
Hobbes on Justice
Abstract Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679) is widely regarded as one of the most important political thinkers in the western tradition. Justice is one of the main political ...
The Theocratic Leviathan
The Theocratic Leviathan
Hobbes’s views on church–state relations go well beyond Erastianism. Rather than claiming that the state holds supremacy over the church, Hobbes argued that church and state are id...
A Profile in Cowardice? Hobbes, Personation, and the Trinity
A Profile in Cowardice? Hobbes, Personation, and the Trinity
This chapter addresses the development of Hobbes’s political theology during the 1660s, particularly in the Appendices to his Latin translation of Leviathan. It challenges the wide...
Mosaic Leviathan
Mosaic Leviathan
This chapter defends three connected claims. First, we can account for Hobbes’s turn towards the Hebrew Bible by understanding the place of biblical Israel in the political and rel...
Devil in the Details
Devil in the Details
This chapter documents where and how Hobbes’s scriptural quotations diverged from contemporary translations of the Bible. While Hobbes usually relied on these translations, it reve...
Introduction
Introduction
The introduction contends that text and context are inseparable and that Hobbes takes on the character and persona of those who appropriate him for purposes of exploitation, or den...
A Limited Leviathan
A Limited Leviathan
The state social contract relationship between rulers and the ruled in civil society is fruitfully understood as a governing convention. This relationship is modeled with an indefi...

Back to Top