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Perspectives on Human Nature and Government

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Title: Perspectives on Human Nature and Government


1
Perspectives on Human Nature and Government
  • Hobbes, Locke, and Rousseau

2
Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)
  • Social order is created by humans. Therefore,
    they can change it.

Without government, society would be solitary,
poor, nasty, brutish, and short!
3
Thomas Hobbes
  • Without society, we would live in a state of
    nature, where we each have unlimited natural
    freedoms.
  • The downside of this general autonomy is that it
    includes the "right to all things" and thus the
    freedom to harm all who threaten one's own
    self-preservation there are no positive rights,
    only laws of nature and an endless "war of all
    against all" (Bellum omnium contra omnes).

4
Thomas Hobbes
  • To avoid this, we jointly agree to an implicit
    social contract by which we each gain civil
    rights in return for accepting the obligation to
    honor the rights of others, giving up some
    freedoms to do so.

5
Thomas Hobbes
  • People need order.
  • People will be willing to give up individual
    liberties to maintain peace.
  • The social contract is an agreement to obey the
    laws.
  • But, human nature will not allow this to happen!
  • Thus, the need for authoritarian government.

6
John Locke (1632-1704)
  • Locke observed that, in society, people were
    rewarded based upon their industriousness.
  • But, people should not accumulate too much money,
    otherwise society could become a horrible place.
  • He proposed (like Hobbes before him) that people
    needed a sense of order. But how to achieve
    order while maximizing individual liberties?

7
John Locke
  • Locke stressed the moral imperative that
    prevented humans from pursuing a free-for-all.
  • A moral imperative is a principle originating
    inside a person's mind that compels him to act.
  • Originally defined by Immanuel Kant, the
    imperative was meant to be a dictate of pure
    reason, in its practical aspect. Not following
    the moral law was seen to be self-defeating and
    thus contrary to reason.

8
John Locke
  • Locke took the imperative to
  • originate in conscience, as the
  • divine voice speaking through
  • the human spirit. The dictates
  • of conscience are simply right
  • and often resist further
  • justification.
  • Lockes faith in conscience stem
  • from the idea that man was born a
  • clean slate (tabula rasa) and was
  • taught morality by society.

9
John Locke
Tabula rasa (clean slate) refers to the
epistemological thesis that individual human
beings are born with no innate or built-in mental
content, in a word, "blank," and that their
entire resource of knowledge is built up
gradually from their experiences and sensory
perceptions of the outside world. Proponents
of tabula rasa favor "nurture" in
the nature versus nurture
debate.
10
John Locke
  • In Locke's philosophy, tabula rasa is the theory
    that data is added to the human mind and rules
    for processing are formed solely by one's sensory
    experiences.
  • As understood by Locke, tabula rasa emphasizes
    the individual's freedom to author his or her own
    soul. Each individual is free to define the
    content of his or her character.

11
Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)
  • Rousseau believed in the concept
    of the noble savage humanity
    unencumbered by civilization the
    normal essence of an
    unfettered human.
  • Since the concept embodies the
    idea that without the bounds of
    civilization, humans are
    essentially good, the basis for the idea of the
    noble savage lies in the doctrine of the goodness
    of humans.
  • Pride and civilization distance humanity from its
    original, natural state of goodness.

12
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  • Agreed with Hobbes Social Contract mutual
    agreement to protect the rights of everyone not
    only the wealthy.
  • No person is above
    the law.

13
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  • "Man is born free and everywhere he is in
    chains."

14
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  • Human nature is basically good
  • Admired the noble savage humans living in a
    state of simple freedom governing themselves
    compassionate
  • Society civilization are corrupting forces on
    the individual
  • Society robs us of our freedom makes us
    bloodthirsty

15
  • Hobbes (1588-1679)
  • Without government, society would be solitary,
    poor, nasty, brutish,
  • and short!
  • Without society, man would live in a state of
    nature, where we each
  • have unlimited natural freedoms.
  • State of nature leads to Right to all things"
    and thus the freedom
  • to harm all who threaten one's own
    self-preservation
  • Right to all Things leads to War of all
    against all" (Bellum omnium
  • contra omnes), and thus chaos, anarchy, end of
    the world-type stuff.
  • Humanity needs the Social Contract in which
    individuals honor the
  • rights of others but lose certain freedoms.
    Unfortunately, human
  • nature will not allow this to happen (we are
    essentially greedy and
  • egocentric), thus, the need for authoritarian
    government.

16
  • Locke (1632-1704)
  • People need a sense of order.
  • Society avoids chaos because of the Moral
    Imperative.
  • The Moral Imperative is based on conscience
    (God).
  • Humans are born as blank slates (tabula rasa),
    which
  • means society can instill proper morality, and
    thus, a
  • conscience.
  • Tabula rasa also implies self-determination and
  • nurture in the nature vs. nurture debate.

17
  • Rousseau (1712-1778)
  • Believed in the concept of the Noble Savage, in
    which
  • humans come from a state of compassionate
    simplicity.
  • Believed that Human Nature is essentially good.
  • Pride and civilization distance humanity from
    its original,
  • natural state of goodness. "Man is born free
    and
  • everywhere he is in chains."
  • Agreed with Hobbes Social Contract, but felt
    more
  • optimistic of its success.

18
Moral Reasoning
  • Lawrence Kohlbergs
  • Theory of Moral Development

19
  • Why do some people feel they must obey the letter
    of the law while others believe that there is a
    higher law?
  • Most countries, including the United States, are
    founded through illegal acts of rebellion or
    revolution.
  • In order to answer this question, Kohlberg began
    to look at the ways in which people develop
    morally.

Lawrence Kohlberg
20
Kohlbergs Stages
  • Kohlberg suggested a stage theory of moral
    development
  • Preconventional Morality
  • 1. Punishment / Obedience
  • 2. Personal Reward Orientation (individualism)
  • Conventional Morality
  • 3. Interpersonal Orientation (good for group)
  • 4. Authority and Social Order (law order)
  • Postconventional Morality
  • 5. Social Contract Orientation
  • 6. Universal Ethical Principle Orientation

21
Kohlbergs Stages
  • Preconventional Morality
  • Stage 1 Punishment-Obedience Orientation
  • Motivation Avoid (physical) punishment
  • MORALITY IS WHAT YOU CAN GET AWAY WITH
  • Example Ill do the right thing so I dont get
    hit.
  • Stage 2 Personal Reward Orientation
  • Motivation Satisfy own needs
  • OBEYS RULES TO OBTAIN REWARDS
  • Example Ill do the right thing if you give me a
    cookie.

22
Kohlbergs Stages
  • Conventional Morality
  • Stage 3 Interpersonal Orientation
  • Motivation Good boy, good girl
  • OBEYS RULES TO GET APPROVAL.
  • Example Ill do the right thing to please
    others.
  • Stage 4 Authority and Social Order Orientation
  • Motivation Maintain Law and Order
  • OBEYS LAWS BECAUSE THEY MAINTAIN THE SOCIAL ORDER
  • Example Ill do the right thing because I have
    respect for the rules.

23
Kohlbergs Stages
  • Postconventional Morality
  • Stage 5 Social Contract Orientation
  • Motivation Majority Rule
  • BELIEF IN DEMOCRATICALLY ACCEPTED LAWS
  • Example Ill do the right thing
    because it is in everyones best
    interest.

24
Kohlbergs Stages
  • Postconventional Morality
  • Stage 6 Universal Ethical Principle Orientation
  • Motivation Maintain universal principles of
    justice, equality, trust, and respect, regardless
    of the reactions of others.
  • CONSCIENCE
  • Example Ill do the right thing because my heart
    tells me its the right thing to do.

25
Kohlbergs Method
  • In order to determine at which stage of moral
    development a person was, Kohlberg presented the
    person with moral dilemmas
  • The Case of Heinz and the Druggist.
  • Mr. Heinz's wife is dying. There is one drug that
    will save her life but it is very expensive. The
    druggist will not lower the price so that Mr.
    Heinz can buy it to save his wife's life. What
    should he do? More importantly, why?
  • Moral dilemmas were judged, not according to the
    respondents position (to steal the drug or not),
    but on the basis of the kind of reasoning the
    answer exhibited.

26
Heart of Darkness
  • Why do some people maintain their sense of
    morality in the absence of law, while others
    revert to immoral, amoral, or even savage
    behavior?
  • Do people need law in order to behave in a
    moralistic fashion?
  • Can those who live in the absence of
    civilization maintain a sense of morality?
    On what do they base their behavior?
  • WHY DO GOOD?
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