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Thomas Hobbes in His Time was first published in 1975. Minnesota
Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable
books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the
original University of Minnesota Press editions. Thomas Hobbes, the
seventeenth-century English philosopher, is the subject of lively
discussion among philosophers, historians, and political theorists
today. Both as a participant in a revolutionary commonwealth and as
a student of the science of human nature, Hobbes has achieved a new
relevance to contemporary society. As the editors of this volume
point out, moralists are apt to place him in the twentieth century,
and historians are apt to portray him as an antique. The aim of
these essays is to get an accurate account of how radical Hobbes
was in his own revolutionary century. The essays are the fruit of
years of cooperative study, going back to John Dewey's calling
attention to Hobbe's interest in transforming the courts of common
law into courts of equity. The recent discovery of more manuscripts
and the publication of better editions of his writings have
stimulated an extensive reinterpretation of Hobbe's ideas and
goals. Even in his own time, Hobbes was subject to attacks from
many sides. Although scholars now generally reject the stereotype
of "Hobbism" which grew during four centuries of revolutionary
developments, new stereotypes to describe his philosophy have
emerged. By assessing Hobbes in terms of his own day, the book will
serve to counteract much contemporary misunderstanding. The essays
cover four aspects of Hobbe's thought: his political theory, his
views on religion, his moral philosophy, and his theory of motion
and philosophical method. With the exception of John Dewey's "The
Motivation of Hobbes's Political Philosophy," all the essays were
written especially for this book. The other essays and authors are
"The Anglican Theory of Salvation in Hobbes" by Paul Johnson, San
Bernardino State College; "Some Puzzles in Hobbes" by Ralph Ross,
Scripps College, The Claremont Colleges; "The Piety of Hobbes" by
Herbert W. Schneider, emeritus professor of Columbia University and
Claremont Graduate School, The Claremont Colleges; "The Generation
of the Public Person" by Theodore Waldman, Harvey Mudd College, The
Claremont Colleges; and "The Philosophia Prima of Thomas Hobbes" by
Craig Walton, University of Nevada.
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