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    being ran‚ they can do so. The goal of his legislation is to protect the common good. John Locke had similar ideas to Rousseau. He believed people were born with unalienable rights. The three rights were life‚ liberty and the pursuit of happiness. He also believe if the government was not functioning in a correct manner‚ the people have the right to revolt. Thomas Hobbes was the most evil of the thinkers. Hobbes states that people are evil and greedy. It’s human nature for people to be power hungry

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    “Many men go fishing all of their lives without knowing that it is not fish they are really after.” Henry David Thoreau. Many men go fishing for fish‚ but they actually go fishing to reminisce about their lives‚ all their hopes and dreams‚ and all that they have accomplished over the years. Some find what they need‚ and they aren’t even aware of it. For example‚ the presidential runners. Are they actually just running to better the lives in the United States or make a mockery of themselves? Donald

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    William Golding‚ there are quotes in the story that help the reader understand what events are happening. Roger exemplifies all the negative human characteristics discussed by Thomas Hobbes. When Roger was introduced to the story‚ he appeared to be someone who would most likely be picked to be a leader‚ or “chief”. Thomas Hobbes mainly believed that “men cannot know good and evil‚ and in consequence can only live in peace together by subjection to the absolute power of a common master‚ and therefore there

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    “Simplicity! Simplicity! Simplicity!” once said by David Henry Thoreau in Walden. Philosophist‚ Thoreau focused on the idea that beyond reality‚ nature and human existence‚ there is a higher truth operating in the universe. He did this by seeking out the ultimate truth in his novel‚ Nature by leaving “life pleasures” of the good life‚ and living with simplicity. While‚ Thoreau went in this expedition on the early 1850s‚ his principles of simplicity are still relevant with the current generation

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    Henry David Thoreau: A Philosophical Reflection Henry David Thoreau was an inexhaustible writer that encompassed poetry and philosophy within his narratives and created a style of writing that‚ for his time‚ was difficult to define and categorize. Because of this his works were often overlooked for the genius that was held within them as writers of his time had already begun to stray from the traditional stances of philosophy. However‚ one can easily survey the works of Henry David Thoreau and do so

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    Hobbes’ Leviathan is divided into four parts: Of Man‚ Of Commonwealth‚ Of a Christian Commonwealth‚ and Of the Kingdom of Darkness. Overall Hobbes tried to explain the reasons a commonwealth may govern men‚ and how to create the best way for this type government to function in order to contain the desires of its denizens. Leviathan represents a key turning point in Hobbes’s perspectives on religion‚ since for the first time he becomes fully aware of what may be called the political problem of religion

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    Rousseau to Hobbes and Locke‚ the differences in their ideologies are prominent‚ however‚ they are still similar in some ways. In the State of Nature according to Rousseau‚ “man’s natural sentiment was that of his existence‚ his first care that of his preservation” (Discourse‚ Part II). This man is known as the “nascent man” and is often contrasted with the “savage man”‚ who exists in civilized society. In this State of Nature‚ man’s primary concern is to look after himself‚ similar to Hobbes’ and Locke’s

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    “qualities that dispose rational men to peace and obedience” (Hobbes‚ Leviathan‚ xxvi). Although Hobbes dedicates considerable time to systematically cataloging nineteen distinct laws of nature‚ he distills them all into a single‚ universally comprehensible maxim‚ “Do not that to another‚ which thou wouldest not have done to thy selfe” (Hobbes‚ Leviathan‚ I.xv). Every man that has sufficiently cultivated his reasoning faculties should‚ in Hobbes’ appraisal‚ be well aware of the Laws of Nature and inclined

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    Henry David Thoreau‚ has a famous quote that states “Many men go fishing all their lives without knowing that it is not fish they are really after.” What does this quote interpret? It interprets that men have the eagerness to do things not knowing what they are really want. They make majority of their choices based upon what they see other people do. Also what looks interesting to them‚ not knowing the outcome or if this is what they are really after. Not saying that just men do it‚ but also females

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    Hobbes: Human Nature and Political Theory Thomas Hobbes writes in his 1651 masterpiece Leviathan of his interpretations of the inherent qualities of mankind‚ and the covenants through which they enter in order to secure a peaceful existence. His book is divided up into two separate sections; Of Man‚ in which Hobbes describes characteristics of humans coexisting without the protection of a superior earthly authority‚ and Of Commonwealth‚ which explains how humans trapped in that primal ‘state

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