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    Humans Are Naturally Evil

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    HUMANS ARE NATURALLY EVIL The question regarding to the nature of human beings being related to the word evil has been a topic for controversial discussion and debate among scholars and philosophers alike. According to the ardictionary.com‚ the word evil is defined as Having or exhibiting bad moral qualities; morally corrupt; wicked; wrong; vicious; as‚ evil conduct‚ thoughts‚ heart‚ words‚ and the like ‚anything which impairs the happiness of a being or deprives a being of any good; anything which

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    Niccolo Machiavelli and Thomas Hobbes were two very important philosophers and political thinkers who attempted to understand human nature and how human nature affects political theory. In this paper I will compare and contrast the different methodologies Niccolo Machiavelli and Thomas Hobbes employed‚ and then analyze how this difference in methodology created a divergent view of human nature. I will then explain their differing views through the idea of self-interest. To compare and contrast Machiavelli

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    Are Humans Good or Evil

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    Are Humans Born Good or Evil? Are humans born good or evil? Most would say that humans are born evil due to our selfishness and even sometimes‚ ruthlessness towards each other‚ but in my opinion‚ humans are good by nature. I believe that humans are good because it is our nature to help and support each other in times of needs. Another reason why I support the fact that we are good is that when we are left alone‚ we are peaceful by ourselves ‚ but as we are introduced to a society‚ certain things

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    Compare and contrast hobbes’ and locke’s accounts of the state of nature. Joana Dourado-000048269 PLT 4100A: Major Political Thinkers Dr. Paul Rekret February 26‚ 2015 [WORD COUNT: 1‚074] The state of nature as one would say is a concept in social contract theories to represent the supposed condition in which the live of man may have possibly been like before the existence of societies. Two 17th century political philosopher‚ which have both given their views and ideas of

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    1642 England was starting to seek for changes in the way their government was set up. John Locke and Samuel Rutherford were the leaders of this change‚ calling for the removal of an absolute monarch. Their works would be opposed by the ideas of Thomas Hobbes‚ during this eighteen-year civil war in England. The ideas represented in this period would heavily influence the way England’s government would be set up in the eighteenth century. In 1644 Bishop Ross‚ also known as John Maxwell‚ published Sacro-Sancta

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    be progressing at the same astonishing rate? Thomas Hobbes influenced the fields of his study‚ as well as the culture that he found himself in; so much so that there are still vestiges of his ideas that are seen in modern-day philosophy‚ government‚ religion‚ and science. Thomas Hobbes inevitably shaped the very way the world is seen today. HOBBES’ LIFE Early Life. According to Tom Sorrell‚ in his biography “HobbesThomas (1588- 1679)”‚ Thomas Hobbes was born April 5 1588 in Westport Wiltshire.

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    Humans Are Naturally Evil

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    People Are Naturally Evil Jumana Satti People are generally evil. When humans are children‚ they want all the attention and affection without having to share it. When they see their mother carrying another child‚ whether that child is a sibling or a complete stranger‚ most children will stop what they’re doing and run over and start crying until they are lifted up and shown the attention that the other child had. Humans show signs of envy‚ jealousy and

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    The English philosopher Thomas Hobbes supported the idea that a social contract is necessary in order for a moral society to be attainable. Hobbes argued that morality would be non-existent within ‘a state of nature’. This is a society that lives in the absence of a social contract or a superior authority; he then concluded that life of an individual in this society would be “solitary‚ poor‚ brutish and short”‚ inevitably‚ by having no one to enforce moral behaviour. Hobbes furthered his argument

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    As humans‚ it is our natural instinct to do whatever it takes to survive. The state of nature describes man before any type of civil society is introduced. John Locke and Thomas Hobbes were both social contract theorists that have two very different opinions about how exactly we behave and what type of governing body would be most successful. While both Hobbes and Locke agree that individual power must be forfeited in order to achieve peace‚ Hobbes’s idea of how much power is extreme. Locke’s theories

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    The Evil in Human Behavior Teachers‚ police officers‚ doctors‚ and the president are examples of authority figures in our society. It is human behavior that normal individuals follow the orders of their authority figure‚ whether it be a student following the classroom rules made by a teacher or supervisor ordering his/her employees. It is natural instinct for humans to do what they are told by the people who are above them. In some cases‚ obeying the authority figure can turn into a frightening

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