“Hobbes’s Moral Philosophy” by Richard Tuck

Tuck, Richard. "Hobbes's Moral Philosophy." In The Cambridge Companion to Hobbes, edited by Tom Sorell, 175–207. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996.

Richard Tuck considers the relation between Hobbes’ remarks on moral philosophy, which is concerned with passions and behavior, and his remarks on optics in De Homine, both of which are meant to combat illusions.

Author’s summary, from the Publisher:

“Hobbes’s whole philosophical enterprise, coming as it did so late in his life, has the character of mature reflection on an entire culture with which he was already completely conversant. Nowhere is this truer than in the area of moral philosophy, in which Hobbes looked back in all his great philosophical works at the way in which he and his contemporaries had actually discussed moral issues, and at the rich and complex ethical culture of Renaissance humanism. Accordingly, in this essay I will deal not only with the philosophical reflections in their own right but also with the way in which they drew upon and interacted with that earlier world of practical moral discourse.”

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