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Samuel Pufendorf disciple of Hobbes : for a re-interpretation of modern natural law /

"Fiammetta Palladini's work is one of the most important discussions of Pufendorf to appear in the latter part of the twentieth century. It cut through the existing field of Pufendorf studies, laying bare its inherited templates and tacit assumptions. Palladini was thus able to peel back t...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Palladini, Fiammetta (Autor)
Otros Autores: Saunders, David, 1940- (Traductor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Italiano
Publicado: Leiden, The Netherlands ; Boston : Brill, [2020]
Colección:Early modern natural law ; volume 2.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Part 1 Pufendorf the Hobbesian; Chapter i The Theory of Obligation; 1 The Hobbesian Matrix of the Theory; 2 Re-Thinking the Hobbesian Principles; 1 Interpretation of the ius in omnia; 2 The Doctrine of 'Moral Entities'; 3 The Notion of 'Obligation'; 4 The Notion of 'Superior'; 5 The Sanction of the Law of Nature; 6 Of What Type is the Obligation of the Law of Nature?; Notes
  • Chapter ii Nature of Man and State of Nature: The Doctrine of Sociality1 Human Nature; 2 The State of Nature; 1 The Definitions of State of Nature; 2 The Effective Use of the Notion; (a) In the De iure; (b) In the De officio; (c) In the 1674 'dissertatio'; 3 The Hobbesian Inheritance in the Doctrines of Socialitas and of the State of Nature; 4 Consequences for the Force of Pufendorf's Anti-Hobbesian Arguments Relating to the State of Nature; Notes; Part 2 Why Did Pufendorf Pass for an Anti-Hobbesian?; Chapter i Pufendorf's Place in the History of Ethics According to Pufendorf; Notes
  • Chapter ii The Role of Cumberland1 The Utilisation of Cumberland; 1 As a Mine for Anti-Hobbesian Arguments; 2 As auctoritas for the Defence; 2 Differences between the First and Second Editions of the De iure; 1 Regarding the Notion of 'Natural Good'; 2 Regarding the Notion of 'Natural Consequences' of Actions; 3 Regarding the Notion of the 'Nature of Things'; 3 Cumberlandian Paternity of These Notions; 4 Incompatibility of Cumberland's System with That of Pufendorf; 5 Other Variants between the First and the Second Editions of the De iure; Notes
  • Chapter iii Anti-Hobbesian Aspects of the Elementa1 The Social Nature of Man in observatio Three of the Elementa; 2 How This observatio is Utilised and Transformed in the De iure; 3 The Origin of Civil Society in the Elementa and the De iure; 4 Drawbacks of the Utilisation of the Elementa in the De iure; 5 What Relation is There, According to Pufendorf, between Law of Nature and Utility?; 6 The Evolution of Pufendorf's Thought; Notes; Chapter iv The Barbeyrac Factor.