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Thomas Hobbes and the common law

In David Dyzenhaus & Thomas Poole (eds.), Hobbes and the law. New York: Cambridge University Press (2012)

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  1. Thomas Hobbes: the eternal law, the eternal word, and the eternity of the law of nature.Robert A. Greene - 2019 - History of European Ideas 45 (5):625-644.
    ABSTRACTThe predication of the eternal law served as premise and and foundation for the existence of the law of nature in the classical/medieval intellectual inheritance of Thomas Hobbes and his contemporaries. Unlike them, he makes no mention of the eternal law in his early writings, The Elements of Law Natural and Politic, and On the Citizen. His triple use of the expression eternal law of God in Leviathan is ambiguous and misleading. Instead, he is one of the first writers in (...)
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  • The leviathan and the chimera: Gian Vincenzo Gravina’s Hobbesianism and its limits.Nathaniel K. Gilmore - 2023 - History of European Ideas 49 (6):926-941.
    In his political thought, seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Italy’s premier jurist, Gian Vincenzo Gravina, adopted a Hobbesian state of nature, a Hobbesian social contract, and a Hobbesian idea of law as collective will; he fused these ideas with the Roman legal tradition, a tradition that he trained in and later ordered when he wrote his masterpiece, the Three Books on the Origins of the Civil Law. But Gravina was more than a Roman Hobbesian. While he held a Hobbesian view of political (...)
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