Hobbes vs. Locke

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  • boondocks77
    FFR Player
    • Jun 2007
    • 883

    #1

    Hobbes vs. Locke

    So I made this thread to provoke debate between the 2 founders of the concept of government. If you have no idea who they are of what this is here's a bit to talk about:
    Thomas Hobbes was the first man to devise a process of governmental affairs. He belived that since man could not control his self-indulgence, he was likely to provoke 'war'. His perception of war could've been a simple argument between two people. This is why he thought that man needed a superior, whether it was one man, or an assembly of people, to judge and consider what would be best for the nation.
    A number of years later, a man named John Locke challenged this way of thinking. He belived that man's right extended as far as not violating any other man's.

    I am a Lockean, a supporter of Locke, but I would like to hear out what's your stand in this. Now everyone, whether apathetic or not, is either a Lockean (Locke supporter), or a Hobbesean (Hobbes supporter). Discuss.
    Last edited by boondocks77; 09-17-2007, 04:44 PM.
    vagina
  • Kilroy_x
    Little Chief Hare
    • Mar 2005
    • 783

    #2
    Re: Hobbes vs. Locke

    Let's begin by rewriting your post.

    Originally posted by boondocks77
    So I made this thread to provoke debate about 2 philosophies regarding conceptions of human beings and the proper role and form of government. If you have no idea who they are of what this is here's a bit to talk about:
    Thomas Hobbes believed that since man could not control his self-indulgence, he was likely to provoke 'war'. His perception of war could've been a simple argument between two people. This is why he thought that man needed a superior, whether it was one man, or an assembly of people, to judge and consider what would be best for the nation.
    A number of years later, a man named John Locke challenged this way of thinking. He belived that man's right extended as far as not violating any other man's.

    I am a Lockean, a supporter of Locke, but I would like to hear out what's your stand in this. Now everyone, whether apathetic or not, is either a Lockean (Locke supporter), or a Hobbesean (Hobbes supporter). Discuss.
    Your contention that Lockean notions of liberty are equivalent to the democratic ideal is false. Your contention that everyone supports either Locke or Hobbes is false. Your contention that these were the first men to come up with ideas about government is false.

    That being said, I support the Lockean notion of human rights, and I support the intention of a constitution which is designed to enshrine these rights. With exceedingly rare exception, human beings are not violent towards one another as a default state of affairs. Generally social pressures act in synergy with an innate human aggressive drive to create violence. Aggression in this context is really just the human propensity to, explore, understand, dominate; human drive itself, in other words. It gets corrupted by social situations.

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    • boondocks77
      FFR Player
      • Jun 2007
      • 883

      #3
      Re: Hobbes vs. Locke

      Originally posted by Kilroy_x
      Let's begin by rewriting your post.
      Let's not. I know what I said. By calling me false, you're stating an opinion not a fact. I stick by what I have said.
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      • lord_carbo
        FFR Player
        • Dec 2004
        • 6222

        #4
        Re: Hobbes vs. Locke

        He did not say the Lockean ideology was wrong, rather that your contentions were.
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        • Kilroy_x
          Little Chief Hare
          • Mar 2005
          • 783

          #5
          Re: Hobbes vs. Locke

          What? You made a number of claims which are verifiable. This means they are falsifiable. I called them false. To say that entails the conversation is in terms of opinion makes about as much sense as this:

          "The sky is made of gold plated hamburgers"

          "No it isn't"

          "That's just your opinion"

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          • rade0110
            FFR Player
            • Dec 2004
            • 1253

            #6
            Re: Hobbes vs. Locke

            Originally posted by boondocks77
            So I made this thread to provoke debate between the 2 founders of the concept of government. If you have no idea who they are of what this is here's a bit to talk about:
            Thomas Hobbes was the first man to devise a process of governmental affairs. He belived that since man could not control his self-indulgence, he was likely to provoke 'war'. His perception of war could've been a simple argument between two people. This is why he thought that man needed a superior, whether it was one man, or an assembly of people, to judge and consider what would be best for the nation.
            A number of years later, a man named John Locke challenged this way of thinking. He belived that man's right extended as far as not violating any other man's. In other words, he was a democrat. (For the people, by the people.)

            I am a Lockean, a supporter of Locke, but I would like to hear out what's your stand in this. Now everyone, whether apathetic or not, is either a Lockean (Locke supporter), or a Hobbesean (Hobbes supporter). Discuss.
            A Lockean theory (in theory) is an ideal. But, in what society will you ever see every person living by the rule "for the people, by the people?" It's impossible. There has to be a set of guidelines is a must, especially for a society as large as the United States or any other massive population. Hobbes didn't believe in a government like a monarchy; where the controlling body put their best interest first. He believed in a government where there were elected delegates who would base their laws and government foundations on what is best for society as a whole.
            Originally posted by Synthlight
            Everyone uses quotes from Synthlight in their signature. So I'm making this one up to fit in.

            Cheers,

            Synthlight

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            • beaner692
              FFR Player
              • Oct 2006
              • 1071

              #7
              Re: Hobbes vs. Locke

              arn't hobbes those little fat people


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              • lord_carbo
                FFR Player
                • Dec 2004
                • 6222

                #8
                Re: Hobbes vs. Locke

                beaner, Critical Thinking is not your forte.
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                • beaner692
                  FFR Player
                  • Oct 2006
                  • 1071

                  #9
                  Re: Hobbes vs. Locke

                  I hadn't read through the posts:

                  I have a belief that religion is the cause of many wars
                  Yeah, Bush has a lot to do with the current war, but people from that side of this world would kill us just because we don't believe in what they believe in

                  And replying to the first post, I think I am more on the side of Locke; He seems most logical to me


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                  • GuidoHunter
                    is against custom titles
                    • Oct 2003
                    • 7371

                    #10
                    Re: Hobbes vs. Locke

                    Originally posted by beaner692
                    I hadn't read through the posts:

                    I have a belief that religion is the cause of many wars
                    Yeah, Bush has a lot to do with the current war, but people from that side of this world would kill us just because we don't believe in what they believe in
                    Originally posted by lord_carbo
                    beaner, Critical Thinking is not your forte.
                    --Guido


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                    • Tps222
                      FFR Player
                      • Nov 2004
                      • 6168

                      #11
                      Re: Hobbes vs. Locke

                      Listen to Kilroy, Boondocks.

                      He correctly re-wrote your post. Your post stated some wrong ideas that were shaped by your opinion.

                      I'm not an anarachist, so I like government. I don't trust people enough to be able to live without a supreme ruling force. I obviously believe in some of Locke's ideas as well, as I obviously don't want my "Life, Liberty, and right to own land" trampled on.

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                      • boondocks77
                        FFR Player
                        • Jun 2007
                        • 883

                        #12
                        Re: Hobbes vs. Locke

                        Originally posted by GuidoHunter
                        sorry im only quoting Guido because of what he did to my siggy. And I do apologize for it. Once my friend told me at lunch about it, I was going to remove it.

                        As for the rest of you, I was trying to get at asking who do you support and why?
                        vagina

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                        • CAFK
                          FFR Player
                          • Mar 2005
                          • 186

                          #13
                          Re: Hobbes vs. Locke

                          I'd have to say that I'm on the Lockean side of this debate. My government teacher explained that a person's right to voilate another's stops when they come in contact with the latter. We as people decide what our own limitations are, and therefore decide what is right and wrong in their own eyes.
                          In regards to Hobbes' thinking, although there may be an authority figure, there are going to be people who don't agree with that person's view, and might have their own definition of what's right and what's wrong. So how is an authority figure or a group of people going to be able to agree on certain laws that people live by if no one agrees with them?
                          Anyways, that's what I think.

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                          • boondocks77
                            FFR Player
                            • Jun 2007
                            • 883

                            #14
                            Re: Hobbes vs. Locke

                            Originally posted by CAFK
                            I'd have to say that I'm on the Lockean side of this debate. My government teacher explained that a person's right to voilate another's stops when they come in contact with the latter. We as people decide what our own limitations are, and therefore decide what is right and wrong in their own eyes.
                            In regards to Hobbes' thinking, although there may be an authority figure, there are going to be people who don't agree with that person's view, and might have their own definition of what's right and what's wrong. So how is an authority figure or a group of people going to be able to agree on certain laws that people live by if no one agrees with them?
                            Anyways, that's what I think.
                            Noob. Lol just kidding. But I don't completely agree with your idea as to why you're a Lockean, though I am that.. also. I just can't grasp how Hobbesean's were any success in the past. Was Hitler killing millions of jews a success? Was Stalin's government a success when doctors, highly educated people, had to work a 2nd job by cleaning houses? Though democrats may have not been successful, they did not kill people. That is basically why I'm a Lockean.
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                            • devonin
                              Very Grave Indeed
                              Event Staff
                              FFR Simfile Author
                              • Apr 2004
                              • 10120

                              #15
                              Re: Hobbes vs. Locke

                              Originally posted by boondocks77
                              Noob. Lol just kidding.
                              Just kidding or not, ad hominem attacks have no place in CT.

                              But I don't completely agree with your idea as to why you're a Lockean, though I am that
                              Please provide some reasons why you feel his reasoning for supporting Locke is insufficent instead of just stating so with nothing to back it up.

                              .. also. I just can't grasp how Hobbesean's were any success in the past. Was Hitler killing millions of jews a success? Was Stalin's government a success when doctors, highly educated people, had to work a 2nd job by cleaning houses?
                              So, you've picked two of the most extreme possible examples you could think of, and claim that they represent the whole of Hobbes' political thought...straw man says -5 points. Also, Godwin'd

                              Further, depending on your perspective, Hitler's government was a stunning success compared to the ruinous state of the Weimar Republic before the Nazi rise to power. What he did with the power was horrible, but that doesn't necessarily mean that all the concepts are wrong.

                              Even more further, Hobbes saying that society needs authority figures doesn't even mean dictatorial authority figures in all cases. You can have a Hobbesean central authority legislating the populous without requiring that they be despots.

                              Though democrats may have not been successful, they did not kill people.
                              Um...there have been democratic nations involved in genocides, wars, concentration and internment camps, forced sterilization of the handicapped and many more things. I utterly don't get where you're getting this "Democratic nations have never done anything bad" idea from.

                              That is basically why I'm a Lockean.
                              So...to sum up, you believe in the precepts of Locke because Hitler and Stalin were bad, and Democratic people have never killed anybody?

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