The Curious Case of Hobbes's Amazons

Journal of the History of Philosophy 57 (4):621-646 (2019)
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Abstract

tales of amazonian warrior women may be the last thing one would expect to find in the work of a seventeenth-century philosopher like Thomas Hobbes. Yet he invokes one story about them in every version of his political theory, from The Elements of Law to De Cive to both the English and Latin versions of Leviathan. This story tells of how the Amazons made contracts to procreate with men from nearby tribes whereby they retained control over their female children and returned their male infants to their fathers. Though the story is told in only a couple of lines, its iteration throughout Hobbes's body of work suggests that it carries more weight than its perfunctory treatment would suggest.To the extent that the...

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Susanne Sreedhar
Boston University

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Medea en Thomas Hobbes.Camila Arbuet Osuna - 2021 - Cuadernos Filosóficos / Segunda Época 18.

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