|
Thomas Hobbes, one of the great English philosophers of the Middle Ages, spent a lifetime thinking about the nature of man. In chapter 13 of his famous book Leviathan, Hobbes states a pitiful conclusion:
The condition of man [in the state of nature]
is a condition of war of every one
against every one.
That's why mankind needs society, Hobbes argues. That's why civilizations need laws and government.
As though the idea of "war of every man against every man" isn't bad enough, Hobbes has a further observation about man in the state of nature (a place where there is no law and no government):
Force and fraud are in war the two cardinal virtues.
Even if we completely disagree with Hobbes about everything else, he seems to have a point here.
Complicating man's ability to get along with other human beings, Hobbes makes another striking statement:
All men have a natural right to all things.
And, in chapter 14, man has the right to "preserve himself" and to do anything he pleases:
For as long as every man holdeth this right, of doing anything he liketh; so long are all men in the condition of war.
Wow! Hobbes didn't think much of man's inherent character! Why not? Although we can't be sure of the answer to that question, we can examine some pretty compelling evidence.
Let's find out what was going on during the Middle Ages - when Hobbes lived. Let's take a look at what people did to each other even when there were laws in place. Let's examine the instruments of torture that were used during the Middle Ages.
GO TO STORY INDEX
|