Social contract theory
著者
書誌事項
Social contract theory
(Readings in social and political theory)
Basil Blackwell, c1990
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- : pbk
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注記
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Social contract theory is one of the key areas of political thought and political philosophy. It is the notion that legitimate government is the artificial product of the voluntary agreement of free moral agents rather than a consequence of 'natural' political authority; or as Locke asserted, 'voluntary agreement gives political power to governors.' Michael Lessnoff's collection of readings includes extracts both from the work of the great contractarian philosophers such as Hobbes, Locke, and Rousseau and from more recent writers such as Rawls and Gauthier.
目次
- Human association and politics, Johannes Althusius
- war, peace and sovereignty, Thomas Hobbes
- the state as the outcome of two contracts, Samuel Pufendorf
- natural rights and civil society, John Locke
- the social contract and the general will, Jean-Jacques Rousseau
- social contract as an idea of reason, Immanuel Kant
- contractarian justice, John Rawls
- constitutional contract and continuing contract, James Buchanan
- the balance between rights individually held and rights collectively held, James Coleman
- justice as social choice, David Gauthier
- a contractarian view of respect for persons, B.J.Diggs.
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