The Platonian Leviathan

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2010-01-30
Publisher(s): Univ of Toronto Pr
List Price: $109.13

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Summary

Thomas Hobbes's influential political treatise, Leviathan , was first published in 1651. Many scholars have since credited him with a mechanistic outlook towards human nature that established the basis of modern Western political philosophy from the perspective of social contract theory. In The Platonian Leviathan , Leon Harold Craig weaves together philosophy, political science, and literature to offer a radical re-interpretation of Hobbes's most famous work.Though Craig begins and concludes his analysis with discussions of Herman Melville's Moby-Dick and includes an essay on Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness , the bulk of his two-part commentary centres on Leviathan . Part One shows the overt principles of Hobbes's political prescription to be untenable, and strongly suggests that Hobbes himself did not subscribe to these rules, using them only as tools to further his philosophical goals. In Part Two, Craig displays the underlying Platonism of Hobbes's thinking. Sure to be controversial, The Platonian Leviathan may nonetheless re-orient the future direction of Hobbes scholarship.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsp. xi
Preludep. xiii
A Melvillian Overture: Moby-Dick and Philosophyp. 3
The Problematical Leviathan: $$$p. 25
Curiosity about Causes and the Problem of Religionp. 29
Reality and the Problem of Materialismp. 51
The Aristotelian Analysis of Causep. 63
The Human Psyche and the Problem of Chancep. 71
The Causes of a Commonwealthp. 79
Nature and the Problem of Teleologyp. 84
The Essentials of Baconian Sciencep. 95
The Baconian Character of Hobbes's Political Projectp. 106
Philosophy and the Problem of Determinismp. 114
Reason and the Problem of Revelationp. 133
Rationality and the Problem of Reasonp. 145
Science and the Problem of Languagep. 169
Honour and the Problem of Natural Lawp. 198
Nobility and the Problem of Hedonismp. 220
Justice and the Problem of Regimesp. 246
Equity and the Problem of Egoismp. 267
A Conradian Intermezzo: Variations on the State of Naturep. 295
The Platonic Leviathan: 'A¿¿o¿ví¿p. 327
The Crucial Paragraph: Platonic Intimationsp. 329
The Heartless Introduction: Hobbes's Disposable Physiologyp. 355
The Original State of Nature: Hobbes's Palaeoanthropologyp. 369
The Ever-Present State of Nature: Greeks versus Barbariansp. 389
The Nature of Men: Equality as a Useful Liep. 418
The Place of Philosophy: The Kingship of Hobbesp. 445
A Colossus of Irony: The Latent Platonism of Leviathanp. 479
A Melvillian Coda: Moby-Dick as Fourfold Allegoryp. 499
Postludep. 525
Notesp. 541
Bibliographyp. 675
Index of Namesp. 685
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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