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The Oxford Handbook of Hobbes

Online ISBN:
9780199983780
Print ISBN:
9780199791941
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book

The Oxford Handbook of Hobbes

Al P. Martinich (ed.),
Al P. Martinich
(ed.)
Philosophy, The University of Texas at Austin
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A. P. Martinich is Roy Allison Vaughan Centennial of Professor in Philosophy, and Professor of History and Government at the University of Texas at Austin. He is the author of The Two Gods of Leviathan (1992) and Hobbes: A Biography (1999), Hobbes (2005), and co-editor with David Sosa of The Philosophy of Language 6th edition (2013).

Kinch Hoekstra (ed.)
Kinch Hoekstra
(ed.)
Political Science, UC Berkeley
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Kinch Hoekstra is Chancellor’s Professor of Political Science and Law at the University of California, Berkeley, and an Affiliated Faculty Member in Philosophy. He was previously a member of the Faculties of Philosophy and Classics at the University of Oxford, where he was the Leveson Gower Fellow and Tutor of Ancient and Modern Philosophy at Balliol College.

Published online:
16 December 2013
Published in print:
1 March 2016
Online ISBN:
9780199983780
Print ISBN:
9780199791941
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

Abstract

The Oxford Handbook of Hobbes consists of twenty-six original chapters by a group of distinguished philosophers, political theorists, historians, and literary scholars from North America and Europe. All the contributors have made substantial contributions to Hobbes scholarship, some over the course of decades. The book is divided into five parts: Logic and Natural Philosophy; Human Nature and Moral Philosophy; Political Philosophy; Religion; and History, Poetry, and Paradox. The goal of each chapter is to advance the understanding of Hobbes’s thought. The discussion in many of the chapters overlaps with discussions in others, and these overlapping discussions provide multiple perspectives on the topic. Because the authors come from several different traditions and have divergent interpretations of Hobbes, the varied perspectives help to illuminate Hobbes’s thought even when they are at odds. Several of the articles interrogate Hobbes’s texts with completely new questions, and others bring to the fore topics that have not been known or appropriately appreciated.

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