Название | A Companion to Hobbes |
---|---|
Автор произведения | Группа авторов |
Жанр | Философия |
Серия | |
Издательство | Философия |
Год выпуска | 0 |
isbn | 9781119635031 |
Two chapters in this volume directly discuss ways of understanding the unity of Hobbes’s philosophy without committing him to deductivist or reductionist views. Hattab (Chapter 1) argues that for Hobbes there are two types of method at play in his philosophy: first, a universal method concerned with the ordering of concepts and definitions before one begins the work of discovery or teaching in a subject; and second, a particular method used to demonstrate conclusions. The first method, Hattab shows, provides the philosopher with principles that can be drawn upon in applications of the particular method within specific disciplines. Adams (Chapter 4) argues that although there is no deductive or reductive relationship between geometry and optics or geometry and natural philosophy, Hobbes held that there was a type of unity nonetheless. Adams argues that in explanations in optics and natural philosophy, one considers natural bodies as if they were mathematical and can then borrow causal principles from geometry. Hobbes identifies this type of explanation as “mixed mathematics” and calls it “true physics.”
Another strategy to achieve unity among the parts of Hobbes’s philosophy, without committing him to deductive or reductive unity, might examine a foundational concept in Hobbes’s thought and see how it plays varying roles within different parts of his philosophy. Given the centrality of the concept “endeavor” to Hobbes’s philosophy, it seems as good a candidate as any for bridging between the different parts of his thought. Indeed, endeavor is part of Hobbes’s natural philosophy as well as a central concept he uses to understand human passions and thus human action.20 Although not focused on the issue of the unity of Hobbes’s philosophy, Edward Slowik’s chapter (Chapter 22) shows how endeavor, understood in terms of actual motion, figures in Hobbes’s understanding of sensation and in his criticisms of “heaviness.” Further reason ‘endeavor’ may be promising as a unifying concept is that Hobbes’s critics were inspired by and criticized Hobbes’s use of this concept. Justin Steinberg’s chapter in this volume (Chapter 26) discusses how Spinoza’s understanding of striving differed from Hobbes’s view of endeavor. Similarly, Howard Williams’s chapter (Chapter 29) treats Kant’s rejection of Hobbesian endeavor, showing how Kant viewed Hobbesian endeavor as characterizing mere animal choice.
4 Conclusion
This introduction has examined the manner in which Hobbes presents his philosophy in his major works and has considered ways in which scholars have tried to understand the unity and diversity of the parts of that philosophy. The aim of this introduction has been to do just that – introduce the reader to the parts of Hobbes’s philosophy generally, using broad brushstrokes, and to introduce the chapters in this Companion. Rather than attempting to solve worries related the structure of Hobbes’s philosophy, which would not be possible in such a context, this introduction has sought to show different ways of understanding Hobbes as a systematic philosopher.
References
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27 Malcolm,