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101. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 5
Roger Paden Four Concepts of Freedom
102. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 5
James P. Sterba Feminist Justice
103. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 5
Steven R. Mansfield Law, Ideology, and Critical Legal Studies
104. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 5
Yeager Hudson Modern Western Constitutionalism and the Separation of Ideology and State
105. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 5
Ruth L. Smith Order and Disorder: The Naturalization of Poverty
106. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 5
Roger J.H. King Relativism and Moral Critique
107. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 5
William W. Clohesy From the State ofNature to the D.S. Constitution?
108. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 5
Karen J. Warren, Martin Gunderson The Feminist Critique of Liberalism
109. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 5
Paul Weirich The General Welfare As A Constitutional Goal
110. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 5
Ellen Bloom Glass Countervailing Conditions: A Way Out of Judicial Precedent
111. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 5
C. L. Sheng A Defense of Utilitarianism Against Rights-Theory
112. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 5
Creighton Peden A Nineteenth Century Constitutional Social Philosopher: F. E. Abbot
113. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 5
Peter P. Cvek A Re-Examination of John Locke’s Theory of Natural Law and Natural Rights
114. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 5
Raphael Sassower Economics in Context: The Bicentennial of the Constitution of the U.S.A.
115. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 7
Sander Lee Repaying the Wronged: Society’s Obligations Towards the Victims of Violent Crime
116. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 7
Richard M. Martin A Philosophical Basis for Biomedical Ethics: The Principle of the Sanctity of Human Life
117. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 7
William E. Murnion The Foundations of Rights
118. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 7
James E. Napier Hobbes: On Human Nature and Political Obligation
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A widely accepted, perhaps prevailing view among Hobbes scholars is that his theory of political obligation is grounded in an egoistic and materialistic view of human nature. There are a number of difficulties with this view, not the least of which is that it seems to make a genuine theory of political obligation impossible. It is the object of the present paper to examine certain aspects of Hobbes's account of human nature, with the object of weaving them together into a single doctrine which is coherent with what he has to say about political obligation. I will conclude by considering briefly how traditional interpretations could have come to prevail.
119. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 7
Alan G. Nasser Freud, Tinkerbell, and the Priority of Sociological to Psychological Understanding
120. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 7
Creighton Peden George Burman Foster’s Social Philosophy of Religion