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Thomas Hobbes

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Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679) was an English philosopher who produced in Leviathan (1651) the most unsentimental theory of Political Legitimacy in the Western tradition: authority is legitimate because the alternative — the state of nature — is worse. Hobbes wrote Leviathan during the English Civil War, and the violence of that conflict is directly legible in every page. He was not a theorist speculating in comfort; he was a man explaining why political order, any political order, is preferable to its absence.

Hobbes's state of nature is not a historical claim but a thought experiment: what would human life look like without a common authority to enforce agreements? His answer — the famous 'war of all against all' in which life is 'solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short' — has been criticized as anthropologically inaccurate, but this misses the point. Hobbes is describing the logical structure of uncoordinated interaction, not a historical epoch. It is the prisoner's dilemma generalized across an entire society.

The Social Contract Hobbes imagines is stark: individuals surrender the right to govern themselves to a sovereign who has sufficient power to enforce peace. The sovereign's legitimacy rests not on virtue or consent but on effectiveness. A government that cannot maintain order has failed its only essential function and forfeited its claim. What Hobbes could not explain — and what has troubled every theory of sovereignty since — is who judges whether the sovereign has met this standard, and by what authority.