Abstract
Elīna Graudiņa in her article “The Natural State of Human According to Hobbes, Locke and Rousseau” examines the views and visions of Enlightenment thinkers on the position of an individual and society in relation to the State, society and each other. Hobbes describes the natural human condition as a selfish desire for self-preservation, characterised by a spirit of competition, distrust and fear. It is the development of “natural law” according to which a man is free to do whatever they like, and “the state of war of all against all” begins. In his natural state, man has both external freedom of action and internal freedom of will, and therefore a natural right to everything. A state where duties and rights are based on contract is a system in which the individual’s selfishness is overridden by his duty to himself, to his neighbour and to the state at large. John Locke argues that there is no innate knowledge in the individual and that man is born as a “blank slate”. He believed that an individual’s personality, knowledge and character are formed as a result of the influences of the world around him. All human beings are free, equal and independent by nature. Thomas Hobbes’s social contract theory was further developed and simultaneously criticized by Jean Jacque Rousseau. He describes transition from the state of nature to the state of citizenship. This transition brings about a remarkable change in man, replacing instinct with justice in their behaviour, giving their actions a moral meaning. What man loses with the social contract is their natural freedom, limited only by the forces of an individual. It must be distinguished from civil liberty, which is limited by the general will and property. Rousseau defends the thesis that man is good by nature and only society corrupts them morally. The philosopher cites a faulty education as one of the reasons for this, and therefore calls for an immediate reform of pedagogy, replacing traditional methods of education with “natural education”. The reform in question is based on precise knowledge of the nature of the child. Several centuries have passed since Hobbes’s conclusions on the selfishness of human nature, but this does not change the fact that the “natural state” of man has not really changed, emphasises Elīna Graudiņa.
Translated title of the contribution | The Natural State of Human Beings According to Hobbes, Locke and Rousseau |
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Original language | Latvian |
Title of host publication | Filosofiskā antropoloģija |
Subtitle of host publication | rakstu krājums |
Editors | Vents Sīlis, Vija Sīle |
Place of Publication | Rīga |
Publisher | Riga Stradins University |
Pages | 25-54 |
Volume | 3 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 978-9934-618-39-0 |
ISBN (Print) | 978-9934-618-36-9 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2024 |
Keywords*
- Cilvēka dabiskais stāvoklis
- valsts;sabiedrība
- T. Hobss
- Dž. Loks
- Ž. Ruso
- apgaismība
- vara
Field of Science*
- 6.3 Philosophy, Ethics and Religion
Publication Type*
- 3.2. Articles or chapters in other proceedings other than those included in 3.1., with an ISBN or ISSN code