Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan
Posted: Wed, Apr 22, 2026
Social contract theory
(1) Society and government are human creations.
- Sociopolitical relations and structures are not natural phenomena.
- Neither is submission to political authority.
- Neither is political authority itself.
- Indeed, for Hobbes, neither are human differences in general (13.1–2).
- Natural hierarchies of human beings are a nonstarter.
(2) (Hu?)men are born free and equal.
- We can imagine a state of the world without human society/government—a natural state/state of nature.
- We are free and equal in the state of nature = we are by nature free and equal.
- Submission to political authority must be chosen—we must agree to be governed.
- Submission to political authority must be chosen—reason compels us to so agree because such submission is in fact liberatory.
- The divine right of kings is a nonstarter.
(3) Politics can be made to stand on a modern scientific basis.
- The justification and limits of government can be derived not only a priori but axiomatically on the model of geometry from facts about human nature.
- Hobbes is also a mechanist: Mechanical principles use motions/interactions of small material parts to explain the world.
Hobbes’ story
Human nature
- Egoism: “a perpetual and restless desire of power after power that ceases only in death . . . because he cannot assure the power and means to live well, which he has present, without the acquisition of more” (11.2).
- Natural equality: Roughly equal strength of the body/ability to kill (13.1); even more equal strength of the mind/we are all not that naturally smart (13.2).
State of nature
- Natural liberty: “absence of external impediments” (14.2).
- Competition over resources ⇒ conflict (I want what you have) ⇒ attack (13.3).
- “Diffidence” or distrust (wait a minute, you also want I have!) ⇒ attack first (13.4).
- Our “glory” or pride ⇒ mutual contempt (you don’t value me as much as I value myself, and vice versa) ⇒ we fight (13.5).
- The state of nature is a state of “war . . . of every man against every man” (13.8).
- Life in the state of nature: “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short” (13.9).
- Right of nature: “the liberty each man has to use his own power as he will himself for the preservation of his own nature; that is to say, of his own life” (14.1), which in a state of war of every man against every man must extend to “a right to every thing, even to one another’s body” (14.4).
The problem
- Collective action problem: Even if I desire peace, I’m powerless to secure it on my own.
- This is a problem so long as a significant number of people are like this.
Establishing the commonwealth
Rationality in the interest of our self-preservation makes us realize:
- A strong enough common political power is necessary to keep the covenants we make “constant and lasting” (17.12).
- The only way to do this—the Leviathan (17.13, 18.1).
- No backsies (18.3).
- The sovereign himself/themselves is not party to the contract and so cannot breach it (18.4, 18.6).
- Dissolution? “For though the right of a sovereign monarch cannot be extinguished by the act of another; yet the obligation of the members may” (29.23).