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As a student, I had seen the names of Hobbes and Thucydides mentioned repeatedly as examples of realism in the study of international relations.1Close Kenneth Waltz found in Thucydides a reflection of his “third image,” a paradigm in which the balance of power that states find themselves in largely determines their actions.2Close Robert Keohane and Joseph Nye, who together have authored some of the best of the pluralist literature, use Thucydides as a representative of their “overall power model,” or the “traditional” international relations paradigm.3Close Hedley Bull found in Hobbes a representative of the realist view that a state of war existed in the international realm just as it did in the state of nature among individuals.4Close In the literature of international relations, Thucydides and Hobbes are often used interchangeably, sometimes as symbols, sometimes as straw men, but infrequently with any substantive penetration of the actual philosophic texts. These references intrigued me and actually were one of the primary reasons I became a student of political philosophy.
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