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Pilot Lecture: Power and Justice—Does Might Make Right?

Discover the hidden philosophic foundations that form our contemporary political and social thinking.
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Overview

Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan is most famous for being one of the first influential texts in English to insist that the legitimacy of any government rests on the consent of the governed. If people refuse to be governed by a particular government, then that government loses its right to govern. In this new Wondrium Pilot, join Professor Jennifer Uleman to explore the balance of justice and power throughout history.

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Pilot Lecture: Power and Justice—Does Might Make Right?
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Power and Justice: Does Might Make Right?

01: Power and Justice: Does Might Make Right?

Thomas Hobbes, an English philosopher who lived from 1588 to 1679, entertained the idea of “might makes right.” But did that mean the mighty were free to do whatever they wanted? Not quite. In his 1651 book, Leviathan, he strongly defended a powerful monarchy, but only because he believed that our own desires to live in peace dictate that we must agree among ourselves to unquestioningly obey an overarching monarchy. Here, Professor Jennifer Uleman explores the balance of justice and power throughout history.

31 min

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