This document provides an overview of Module 1 of a course on the classical era and theory of the city-state. It covers 5 units: 1) Notion and Evolution of Political Thought, 2) Plato, 3) Aristotle, 4) Decline of City-States, and 5) Marcus Tullius Cicero. It discusses the origins of western political thought in ancient Greek city-states and the views of philosophers such as Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, and Aquinas on the relationship between the individual and the state.
This document provides an overview of Module 1 of a course on the classical era and theory of the city-state. It covers 5 units: 1) Notion and Evolution of Political Thought, 2) Plato, 3) Aristotle, 4) Decline of City-States, and 5) Marcus Tullius Cicero. It discusses the origins of western political thought in ancient Greek city-states and the views of philosophers such as Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, and Aquinas on the relationship between the individual and the state.
This document provides an overview of Module 1 of a course on the classical era and theory of the city-state. It covers 5 units: 1) Notion and Evolution of Political Thought, 2) Plato, 3) Aristotle, 4) Decline of City-States, and 5) Marcus Tullius Cicero. It discusses the origins of western political thought in ancient Greek city-states and the views of philosophers such as Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, and Aquinas on the relationship between the individual and the state.
This document provides an overview of Module 1 of a course on the classical era and theory of the city-state. It covers 5 units: 1) Notion and Evolution of Political Thought, 2) Plato, 3) Aristotle, 4) Decline of City-States, and 5) Marcus Tullius Cicero. It discusses the origins of western political thought in ancient Greek city-states and the views of philosophers such as Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, and Aquinas on the relationship between the individual and the state.
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MODULE 1 CLASSICAL ERA AND THE THEORY OF THE CITY STATE
Unit 1 Notion and Evolution of Political Thought
Unit 2 Plato: His Life and Times (427-347 BC) Unit 3 Aristotle: His Life and Times (384-322 BC) Unit 4 Decline of City States Unit 5 Marcus Tulius Cicero (106-43 BC) UNIT 1:- NOTION AND EVOLUTION OF POLITICAL THOUGHT CONTENTS 1.0 Introduction 2.0 Objectives 3.0 Main Content 3.1 Notion and Evolution of Political Thought 4.0 Conclusion 5.0 Summary 6.0 Tutor-Marked Assignment 1.0 INTRODUCTION This course begins with an examination of the meaning and concern of political thought and the trend in the evolution of the discipline. Attention will be focused on the changing notion of state power across several epochs in history. This is with a view to showing the variations in thoughts concerning the state over the centuries. The student is expected to understand these variations as they are fundamental to understanding the entire course when broken into specific eras. It is advised that the student should be painstaking in studying this material. This is because the details though interesting, often requires patience and commitment to actually understand the unfolding fact associated with the course. It is also necessary that the student should be open-minded and free from the bondage of dogma as this will go a long way to aid the appreciation and assimilation of the logics of political thought. 2.0 OBJECTIVES At the end of this unit, you should be able: • to explain the meaning and concern of political thought • to trace the origin and trend in political thought • to identify the changing notion of the state in different eras • to identify the philosophers in each era and the nature of their thoughts. 3.0 MAIN CONTENT 3.1 Notion and Evolution of Political Thought Political thought has been described as man’s attempt to consciously understand and solve the problems of his group life and organisation. Sabine and Thorson (1973: 3) described it as an intellectual tradition whose history consists of the evolution of men’s thoughts about political problems over time. It is the disciplined investigation of political problems which has over the centuries attracted inquiries from political philosophers such as Plato, Aristotle, St Augustine, Machiavelli, Karl Marx and many others. Consequently, the focus of any study on the history of political thought is to understand and interpret the various perspectives on collection of writings on the changing theories of the state. Such an inquiry will explore the reason of the state, the nature of the state and the place of the individuals within the framework of the state. It seeks to establish yardsticks upon which the state and its machineries can be objectively assessed. Specifically, the thrust of political thought has often raised questions on the limits of state power, the relationship between the church and the state, the so-called political obligation and polemics on the contract and relationship between the citizens and the state In line with this, philosophers in time and space have often sought to explore not only the objective realities of a political system but also the ideal reality. These endeavors have over the centuries revealed consensus ideals and sometimes conflicting perspectives on what is and what ought to be the nature of reality in a political society. The origin of western political thought has often been traced to the fifth century BC and is often associated with Greece. This is because the Golden Age of Athens is often assumed to be the beginning of western political civilization. Historically, Greece is the place where Europeans contacted the civilization of ancient Middle East and where they crossed the threshold of science, philosophy and political theory. The history of western political philosophy begins with ancient Greece. Greek politics was characterized by the existence of city states Aristotle and Plato wrote of the polis as an ideal form of association or organized society of men dwelling in walled towns (the heart and home of political society) in which the whole community’s intellectual, religious, cultural, political and economic needs could be satisfied. The polis, characterized primarily by its self-sufficiency, was seen by Aristotle as the means of developing morality in the human character. It is significant to observe here that the Greek polis corresponds appropriately to modern concept of nation, a population of a fixed area that shares a common language, history and culture. The experience of ancient Rome was however at variance. Here, the King was called Rex. He was the sole ruler and his power was expressed by the word imperium. Bluntschli observed that the imperium of the Rex was technically unlimited both in peace and war. He was supreme judge, high priest and Commander in chief in war. He appointed all officials. The Roman Res Publica or Commonwealth corresponds more accurately to modern concept of the state. The Res Publica was a legal system whose jurisdiction extended to all Roman citizens, securing their rights and determining their responsibilities. With the fragmentation of the Roman Empire, the question of authority and the need for order and security led to a long period of struggle between warring feudal lords of Europe. that had no other existence outside the framework of the polis. In the classical era, man was conceived as a fraction of the polis or self governing city state that had no other existence outside the framework of the polis. The city state was on its part conceived as the only genuine platform through which political values could be realised. There was no premium attached to the notion of individualism. Specifically, a good life was perceived only in terms of participation in the life or activities of the polis. It is in line with this that Plato described the state as the bottom of division of labour in which men of differing capacity satisfy their needs by mutual exchange. Participation in the affairs of the polis was ethically conceived as more important than either duties or rights. As Aristotle put it, happiness is activity and he who does nothing cannot do well. Aristotle observed that the polis was self-sufficing as being not too large as to prevent unity of interests and feelings among it members. Furthermore, he maintains that the citizens of the polis must be capable of ruling and being ruled. Thus, the evolution of democratic thoughts was evident in the Greek city states. Within the polis, citizenship was perceived in terms of sharing of the common life stands at the summit of human goods. Consequently, to advocate or assert that for individual to seek for a good life outside the frontiers of the polis, or to be in it and not be of it was not only alien but also perceived as a sacrilege. During the centuries that followed the collapse of Rome, the political organization of Western world was extremely pluralistic. Theoretically, the medieval political system was based on the idea that the Pope and Emperor, as Vicars of Christ were jointly responsible for the governance of Christendom. Writing in this epoch, St Aurelius Augustine (354-438 AD), makes a distinction between a universal order of justice and the order of the state. For him, men as individuals, should ultimately honour the universal society than the state. In his contribution to political ideas of this era, St. Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274) supports the church supremacy over the state. Consequently, he advocated that secular government should be subordinate to the church because the latter is concerned with ultimate purpose that is the salvation of souls. In the centuries between St. Augustine and St. Aquinas, feudalism emerged as the dominant socio-economic and political characteristic of the Middle-Ages. The feudal era, which lasted for about ten centuries, is a socio- economic system of land ownership wherein the lords, release out land (manor) to serfs who owe loyalty to the lords. They work on the land and must return a good portion of the produce to the lord Practical exigencies of the state reached a point in the emergence of Reformation and Renaissance. The arrival of Protestantism raised serious questions of political obligation in the evolution of political thought. Practicing Lutherans and The Calvinist began to rethink their continued loyalty to Catholic Princes and even Catholic subjects thought the same way about Protestant Princes. The consequence of this was the crystallization and codification of natural laws and doctrines of state sovereignty. The reformation supported the absolutism of Monarchs and placed all ecclesiastical authority to civil predominance. Reformation scholars such as Hobbes supported absolutism in his Leviathan, which contained his social contract theory. Machiavelli on his part freed kings from the limitation imposed by public morality. He argues that the state is an end in itself, For him, the prince should aim at conquering and maintaining state and the end will be judged honourably and praised by everyone. It was from the writings of Nicollo Machiavelli and Jean Bodin that the modern concept of state as the centralizing force for stability emerged. In The Prince, Machiavelli gave prime import to the durability government, sweeping aside all moral consideration and focusing instead on the strength, the vitality, courage and independence of the ruler. For Bodin, power was not sufficient in itself to create a sovereign. Rules must comply with morality to be durable, and it must have continuity i.e. a means or establishing succession. The era of reformation and renaissance was succeeded by the era of reason and enlightenment. This era was characterized by intense skepticism of religious revelations, the increasing spread of literacy and consequential growth in the size of politically conscious, curious and ambitious communities. Descartes, Montesquieu, Voltaire and Rousseau who contributed to French encyclopedia believed in the power of reason and knowledge to liberate man from restrictive political and religious systems. Montesquieu writing on liberty emphasized that political freedom is to be found in moderate governments where power is not abused. He argued that when the legislative and executive powers are united in the same person, or in the same body, there can be no liberty and if the judicial power be not separated from the legislative and executive, the life and liberty of subjects would be exposed to arbitrary control. A significant feature and prevailing belief of the Enlightenment is the Principle of liberty as contained in Code Napoleon which emphasized that the state should not encroach on individual’s freedom. This code was exported from France to Europe and the rest of the world. Utopian thinkers looked forward to the emergence of politics not characterized by inequalities and injustice. Jeremy Bentham in his work, A Fragment of Government (1776) and Principle (1789) advocated for utilitarianism, which emphasized that the happiness of the majority of individuals was the greatest good. Rousseau extends the dominant notion of the era by advocating that the state should owe its authority to the general will of the governed because the law is none other than the will of the people as a whole and an environment for the moral development of humanity. UNIT 2 PLATO: HIS LIFE AND TIMES (427-347 BC) CONTENTS 1.0 Introduction 2.0 Objectives 3.0 Main Content 3.1 Plato: His Life And Times 3.2 Political Thought before Plato 3.3 Plato’s Ideal State and Best Form of Government 1.0 INTRODUCTION This unit examines the political thoughts of Plato. Specifically, it begins with an exploration of the life and times of Plato as a background to understanding the prevailing orientations and influence on him. The focus on Plato examines his treatment of the forms of government, nature of education, his thesis of the philosopher king and other classes in society. It is remarkable to state that Plato falls within the scope of what is described as idealist political thinkers. 3.0 MAIN CONTENT 3.1 Plato: His Life And Times Plato was the son of a wealthy and influential Athenian parent. He began his philosophical life as a student of Socrates. Following the death of his master, Plato traveled to Egypt and Italy where he studied with students of Pythagoras. He remained an adviser to the ruling family of Syracuse for several years before returning to Athens to establish his school of philosophy called The Academy, where he sought to transmit the philosophical heritage of Socrates to his students through mathematical learning, to At inception, Plato sought to convey the spirit of Socrates’ teaching by presenting accurate reports of the master’s conversational interaction through series of dialogue which later became the major source of information on the thoughts of Socrates. Such early dialogues were typically devoted to the investigation of single issues, about which a conclusive result is rarely achieved. For instance, the Euthyphro raised significant doubts about whether morally right action can be defined in terms of divine approval by pointing out a significant dilemma about any appeal to authority in defence of moral judgments. The middle dialogues of Plato continued to utilize Socrates as a fictional character to develop, express, and defend his own, more firmly established, conclusions about central philosophical issues. For instance, Plato utilized the Meno, to introduce the doctrine of recollection in an attempt to discover whether or not virtue can be taught. He also utilized it to report the logics of Socrates that no one knowingly does wrong The masterpiece in the series of Plato’s middle dialogues is revealed in The Republic. It adopted as its point of departure, the conversations of Socrates about the nature of justice and proceeds directly to an extended discussion on the virtue. of justice. Wisdom, wisdom as they appear both in individual human beings and in society as a whole. Political Thought before Plato Sabine and Thorson observed that while the Great Age of Athenian public life fell in the third quarter of the fifth century, the Great Age of political philosophy came only after the downfall of Athens in her struggle with Sparta. Herodotus treatise on History exposed the curiosity in Greeks of the fifth century to the laws, customs and institutions of other parts of the world. It became obvious that some behavior which were upheld and praised in one place maybe condemned and ridiculed in another. Socrates;- exhibited the rational tradition of raw philosophy based on the belief that virtue is knowledge which can be learned and taught. He was engaged in the quest for a valid general rule of action and imparting through education. Aristophanes (445-380 BC) was a Greek philosopher who defended the aristocratic order of Greek politics. For him, democracy was not a good form of government because it created avenue for unqualified people to occupy political positions. 3.3 Plato’s Ideal State and Best Form of Government Writing on the ideal state or polis, Plato describes it as a just state based on justice which is the earthly manifestation of the human soul. He identified two basic principles that underlie the polis as the mutual needs of the individuals that make up the polis and secondly, the various aptitudes to be realized. he describes the polis as a natural growth with its modes and mores and based on the needs and aptitudes of its members. Plato shares the view that to establish or govern a state is a labour to which the human hero shows himself most godlike while the life of political service is the crown of human blessedness. Plato further identified three major social classes in the ideal state as the rulers, the soldiers and the producer or workers Nous. Kings or rulers who with the aptitude of wisdom govern and legislate for the polis. They are the lovers of wisdom, truth and knowledge. This category of officials should neither marry nor own property. Thumas, the soldiers or auxiliaries and guardians of the rulers. They are primarily concerned with the defence of the polis. This class must be sustained by courage and fortitude to keep order and control of workers. They must be subject to the Philosopher Kings and must possess neither property nor wealth. The Soma or body refers to the producers, that is, the workers in the society. Members of this class are guided by desire for satisfaction of senses and with their desire and temperance provide the polis with material subsistence. They are subject to the Nous and Thumos and have no significant political responsibility. Plato extols “Aristocracy” as the best form of government where only the best rule for general interests. To this form of government, he describes others as inferior. He subsequently identified and describes other forms of government as degeneration from the ideal state. Another deviation from the ideal state is Oligarchy. Here, the few rule in their narrow and selfish interests. Under oligarchy, it is wealth or property qualification that counts and political power is in the hands of the rich and the poor have no share of it. Another deviation from the ideal state is Oligarchy. Here, the few rule in their narrow and selfish interests. Under oligarchy, it is wealth or property qualification that counts and political power is in the hands of the rich and the poor have no share of it. Plato further classified democracy as another deviation from the ideal state. He conceived democracy as originating from the conflict of the minority rich and majority poor wherein the poor emerged victorious. He described it as a society where there is equality of political opportunity and freedom for every individual member to do as he likes. The last degeneration from the ideal state in the views of Plato is Tyranny. This society is characterised by oppressive government either by an absolute ruler or group of rulers which administer with cruelty and without due regards for the rule of law. Plato’s ideal state is based on reason and controlled by the Philosopher King. He proposed that the Philosopher King must emerge through a rigorous process of education which involves both theoretical and practical orientations and that this education will continue until they are at least fifty years It is expected that the curriculum must include disciplines such as mathematics, physical education, politics, psychology and philosophy. Only persons who have successfully completed this curriculum and emerged outstanding will take their turn to steer the turbulent ship of statecraft. UNIT 3 ARISTOTLE: HIS LIFE AND TIMES (384-322 BC) CONTENTS 1.0 Introduction 2.0 Objectives 3.0 Main Content 3.1 Life and Times of Aristotle 3.2 Basic Works of Aristotle 4.0 Conclusion 5.0 Summary 6.0 Tutor-Marked Assignment 1.0 INTRODUCTION This unit examines the political ideas of Aristotle often described as the father of comparative politics. Specifically, attempt is made to highlight the nature of ideas espoused by Aristotle and the various factors and experiences that helped shape his thoughts. Like Plato, the thrust in the philosophy of Aristotle was motivated by the need to evolve a pattern of governance that will enhance the attainment of the good life. He compared various constitutions and identified three forms of government and their perversions. 2.0 OBJECTIVES At the end of this unit, you should be able to: • to expose the students to the basic works of Aristotle • to identify the events in Aristotle’s life that influenced his political ideas • to stimulate further discussion on nature of political thoughts of Aristotle. 3.0 MAIN CONTENT 3.1 Life and Times of Aristotle Aristotle was born in 384 BCE at Stagirus, a Greek colony and seaport on the coast of Thrace. His father Nichomachus was court physician to King Amyntas of Macedonia, and from this began Aristotle's long association with the Macedonian Court, which considerably influenced his life. While he was still a boy his father died. At age 17 his guardian, Proxenus, sent him to Athens, the intellectual center of the world, to complete his education. He joined the Academy and studied under Plato, attending his lectures for a period of twenty years. As Aristotle matured, he began to lecture on rhetoric. At the death of Plato in 347, Aristotle was invited by his friend Hermeas, ruler of Atarneus and Assos in Mysia, to his court where he spent three years and got married to Pythias, (the King’s niece). Aristotle returned to Athens after the death of Philip and left Alexander to continue with the challenge of leadership. Upon his return, he discovered that the Platonic school was flourishing under Xenocrates and that Plato’s doctrine has become the dominant philosophy in Athens. He subsequently established his school which became known as the Lyceum. Aristotle subsequently devoted time and energies to his teaching and philosophical inquiries. Two types of teaching dominated Aristotle’s lectures. Two types of teaching dominated Aristotle’s lectures. The first was the more detailed discussions to a select caucus of advanced students which he usually administers in the morn while the second was the popular discourses in the evening for the lovers of knowledge. After his death, Aristotle's writings were held by his student Theophrastus, who had succeeded Aristotle in leadership of the Peripatetic School. The name Peripatetic school was used to describe Aristotle and his followers because they had the habit of walking about while in a discourse. In his work, Politics, Aristotle defined politics as merely an extension of ethics. He studied the constitutions of over 150 polities and it is on this basis that he is often ascribed as the “Father of Comparative Politics.” Basic Works of Aristotle Aristotle conceives politics as an integral aspect of ethics which is a completion and verification of it. He maintains that the moral ideal in political administration is only a different aspect of that which also applies to individual happiness. Man, for him is a political animal and a fraction of the city state and that the city state is the necessary condition for civilized life and the only means for bringing human faculties to their highest form of development. He further contends that humans are by nature social beings, and the possession of rational speech (logos) in itself leads us to social union. He conceived the ideal state politike - political community) to be an offshoot from the family which evolved through the village community, to town, nation and subsequently the state. It is usually based on sharing as it was originally formed for the satisfaction of natural wants. The ideal state exists afterwards for moral ends and for the promotion of the higher life. The state as such is no mere local union for the prevention of wrong doing, and the convenience of exchange. It is an institution for the protection of goods and property and also a genuine moral organization for advancing the development of humans. The family, which chronologically exists prior to the state, involves a series of relations between husband and wife, parent and child, master and slave. Aristotle describes slavery as a natural institution and the slave as a piece of live property which has no existence except in relation to his master. He described the communal ownership of wives and property as sketched by Plato in the Republic as based on a false conception of political society. In his view, the state is not a homogeneous unity, as Plato believed; rather it is made up of dissimilar elements. The classification of constitutions is based on the fact that government may be exercised either for the good of the governed or of the governing, and may be either concentrated in one person or shared by a few or by the many. There are thus three true forms of government: monarchy, aristocracy, and constitutional republic. The perverted forms of these forms of government are tyranny, oligarchy and democracy. The difference between the last two is that democracy is a government of the many, and oligarchy of the few; instead, democracy is the state of the poor, and oligarchy of the rich. Which is the best state is a question that cannot be directly answered. Different races are suited for different forms of government, Aristotle affirms that education is of primary importance in a polity because it promotes the progress of the constitution by positively moulding the character and perception of the citizens. As such, he insists that education should be guided by legislation to make it correspond with the results of psychological analysis, and follow the gradual development of the bodily and mental faculties. Children should during their earliest years be carefully protected from all injurious associations, and be introduced to such amusements as will prepare them for the serious duties of life. Their literary education should begin in their seventh year, and continue to their twenty-first year. This period is divided into two courses of training, one from age seven to puberty, and the other from puberty to age twenty-one. Such education should not be left to private enterprise, but should be undertaken by the state. There are four main branches of education: reading and writing, Gymnastics, music, and painting. They should not be studied to achieve a specific aim, but in the liberal spirit which creates true freemen. UNIT 4 DECLINE OF CITY STATES CONTENTS 1.0 Introduction 2.0 Objectives 3.0 Main Content 3.1 Epicurean Philosophy 3.2 The Cynics 3.3 The Stoic 3.0 MAIN CONTENT 3.1 Epicurean Philosophy Epicurean philosophy sought to inculcate in its students, a state of individual self-sufficiency. Its primary teaching is that a good life consists of the enjoyment of pleasure. To the Epicureans, happiness implies the avoidance of pain, worry and anxiety. The wise man in their view will have nothing to do with politics unless circumstances compel him to do so. The Epicurean philosophy identified the anxiety of religion, It further advanced the belief that the gods care not about men and do not interfere either for good or evil in the course of their lives. For the Epicurean philosophers, nature means physics and constitutes the atom from which all things are made. However, they observed that so far as the individuals are concerned, nature means self interest, the desire of every man for his own individual happiness. The Epicurean thesis reveals an attack on religion and superstition in an era when the significance of religion was steadily on the increase. The Cynics The Cynics propagated a protest against the City States and the social classifications upon which it rested.. It is significant to note that the Cynics consist of individuals who were recruited from the ranks of foreigners and exiles and as philosophers they adopted a life of poverty on principle. The essential doctrinal kernel as espoused by the Cynics is that the wise man ought to be completely self-sufficing. By implication, it means that only things within his power, his thought and character is sufficient to lead the good of life. The Cynics abhor social discrimination that characterized the Greeco-Roman polities, 3.3 The Stoic The Stoic movement emerged as the fourth major Athenian school of philosophy around 300 BC, and became more pronounced during the second century after Christ. Its founder was Zeno of Citium. Other leaders of the Stoic movement after Zeno came from elsewhere particularly Asia where there was a remarkable mixture of Greeks and the Orientals. At inception, Stoicism was a branch of Cynism but Zeno broke ranks because of the crudeness and lack of decorum to which their naturalism led. One platform explored by the Stoics was the focus on monarchy which political philosopher of the past like Aristotle gave only an academic focus. Stoicism which is considered a Hellenistic school propagated the theory of deification of Kings. A true king was considered divine because he brought harmony to his Kingdom as God brings harmony into the world. The authority of the King was therefore assumed to have moral and religious sanctions which his subjects could recognize without lose of their own moral freedom and dignity. The ethical purpose of Stoicism like other philosophies before it, was designed to produce self-sufficiency and individual well being. An essential kernel of the Stoic philosophy emanates from the religious conviction of oneness and perfection of nature or a true moral order. they posit that there is in existence, a world state, which both men and God are all citizens. This world state has a constitution which is right reason, teaching men what must be done and what must be avoided. Right reason for them, is the law of nature, the standard everywhere of what is right and just. UNIT 5 MARCUS TULIUS CICERO (106-43 BC) CONTENTS 1.0 Introduction 2.0 Objectives 3.0 Main Content 3.1 Life of Cicero 3.2 Cicero’s View of Law 3.3 Cicero’s View of State 1.0 INTRODUCTION The focus of this unit is on the political thoughts of Marcus Cicero. It is remarkable to note that the writings of this philosopher had remarkable impact on the political ideals of his era. While it is accepted that Cicero apparently lacked originality in much of his work, it is noteworthy to credit him with the fact that his ideas were open to public consumption 3.0 MAIN CONTENT 3.1 Life of Cicero Marcus Cicero is one of the outstanding statesmen and orators of the Roman empire. He was born in Arpinum under Rome and got influenced by the works of Plato and Aristotle. Consequently, his works, which represented a form of Stoicism, were preserved for the reading public at all future times. One remarkable fact about the work of Cicero is that they were merely compilations of previous works and as such had little originality. However, the merit of his writings is based on the fact that they were widely read. It is also significant to note that the wide acceptability of Cicero’s works to the political authority in his time made it possible for accessibility to even future generations. His outstanding political works include such political treatises like De Re Publica- The Republic 51 BC and De Legibus- The Law represents represents credible indexes of the political thoughts of Rome especially in conservative and aristocratic circles during the last days of the Republic. 3.2 Cicero’s View of Law Cicero contends that the natural law of reason is the basis of all other laws and that its source is divine wisdom and reason that directs the entire universe. The state and its laws are always subject to the law of God, or the moral and natural law, that is, the higher rule of right which transcends human choice and human institutions. Cicero emphasized the existence of a universal law of nature akin to God. In this law lies the constitution of the universal-state. The universal law in the views of Cicero is the same everywhere and is unchangeably binding on all men irrespective of nationality. In this law lies the constitution of the universal-state. The universal law in the views of Cicero is the same everywhere and is unchangeably binding on all men irrespective of nationality. He insists that any legislation that contravenes the universal law is not entitled to be described as law because no ruler or people can invalidate it. Cicero further contends that, laws have the inherent quality of truth and justice. As such the laws of the state must also be just and true to deserve being termed as law and that such law must protect the citizens and the state as well as safeguard the tranquility of human life. The universality of this law implies that there will be no different law in Rome and Athens now and in the future. Cicero further maintained that a state without laws cannot be considered a true state because law is the greatest good of the state. Furthermore, he insists that since all men are subject to one law, they are equal. because equality is a moral requirement which suggests that some measure of human dignity and respect be accorded to every individual since we all are members of the great human brotherhood. Law for Cicero is therefore, the natural force, that is, the mind and reason with which the intelligent man measures justice and injustice. 3.3 Cicero’s View of State Cicero associated the origin of the state with man’s natural gift of social spirit which draws him always to partnership. A state in his view cannot exist permanently or in any form except a crippled condition, unless it depends upon or acknowledges the consciousness of mutual obligation and the mutual recognition of rights that bind its citizens together. It is therefore seen as a moral community, a group of persons who in common possess the state and its laws. Such a community represents an association of a good number of people based on justice and partnership to secure common good. The state he therefore argued is a corporate body whose membership is in the possession of all citizens and supplies its members with the advantages of mutual aid and just government. CONCLUSION Marcus Cicero had remarkable influence on the nature of law in Romans society. His ideas explained the various forms of governments and how they alternate to evolve a desirable pattern for political governance in the society. MODULE 2 MEDIEVAL ERA AND THE THEORY OF UNIVERSAL COMMUNITY Unit 1 Seneca and the Christian Fathers Unit 2 St Aurelius Augustine (354-430)
Unit 3 Feudalism (200-1400)
Unit 4 St. Thomas Aquinas (1225- 1274) UNIT 1 SENECA AND THE CHRISTIAN FATHERS CONTENTS 1.0 Introduction 2.0 Objectives 3.0 Main Content 3.1 Basic Teachings of Seneca 3.2 Christian Obedience 3.3 St. Ambrose 3.4 St. Gregory 1.0 INTRODUCTION A major feature of the trend in political theory during the medieval era was the contestations between the church and the state. Consequently, the underlying theme in the nature of political theories in this era was aimed at addressing this controversy. Seneca is one of the philosophers who made significant impact to influence the nature of political thought in this era. 3.0 MAIN CONTENT 3.1 Basic Teachings of Seneca The well centralized system of authority presented in the Roman law reflects not only administrative unity of the empire but also the ancient conviction that the state is supreme among human institutions. There exist some similarities and distinction between the ideas of Cicero and Seneca especially as it concerns the ability of statesmen to deal with social problems. First, both men shared an eclectic stoicism which nature represented and a standard of goodness and reasonableness. They also described the great age of the Republic as a time when Rome achieved her political maturity and afterwards decline into senility, corruption and despotism. In the view of Seneca, dependency on a despot was preferable to dependency on the people because the mass of men is so vicious and corrupt that it is more merciless than a tyrant. He argued that a political career has little to offer the good man except the annihilation of his goodness. As such, he contended that a good man has little to do for his fellows by holding political office. He however envisaged a social service which involved no function of a political sort and maintained that it was the moral duty of the good man to offer his service in this capacity. Seneca further noted that the greater commonwealth is a society rather than a state. This commonwealth is bound more by morals and religion than by legal or political ties. As such, the wise and good man renders service to the society even though he has no political power. This service is rendered by virtue of his moral relations to his fellow men as well as through philosophical contemplation. Likewise, Seneca considers the worship of God as another truly human service. (Sabine and Thorson; 1973: 172) Seneca’s emphasis on the existence of government as a remedy for human evil reflects an enormous shift in moral opinion from the orthodoxy set by Greek political philosophers on political institutions. Aristotle expressed the opinion that the city state is the necessary condition for civilized life and the only means for bringing human faculties to their highest form of development. 3.2 Christian Obedience It has sometimes been argued that the rise of the Christian church as a distinct institution entitled to govern the spiritual concerns of mankind and independent of the state is the most revolutionary incident in the history of Western Europe, as it concerns politics and political philosophy. This is because, while it is accepted that Christianity is a doctrine of salvation which emphasized the providential government of the world, the obligation of law and government to do substantial justice and the equality of all men in the sight of God, certain ideas exposed by the Christian father had bearing on the functioning and processes of the society. For instance, in St. Paul’s letter to the Galatians, he denounced difference of race and social position when he observed that “there is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female, for ye are all one in Jesus Christ.” St. Ambrose Christian Fathers like St. Ambrose were especially uncompromising in issues relating to the autonomy of the church in spiritual matters. This uncompromising posture made him a source of reference for other Christians in later controversies on the issue. Specifically, he declared unequivocally that in spiritual matters, the church had jurisdiction over all Christians, the emperor included, for the emperor like every other Christian is a son of the church; he is within the church, not above it. In a letter to Emperor Valentinian, St. Ambrose clearly stated that it was the bishops that will judge the Christian emperors, not the emperors to judge the Bishops. 3.4 St. Gregory Another Christian Father that made remarkable contribution to the doctrine of the state and church is St. Gregory. In his views, a wicked King is also entitled to obedience. Writing in his Pastoral Rule, he maintained that the subjects must obey the rulers and in addition, they must not judge or criticize the lives of their rulers. UNIT 2 ST AURELIUS AUGUSTINE (354-430) CONTENTS 1.0 Introduction 2.0 Objectives 3.0 Main Content 3.1 Life and Times of St. Augustine 3.2 St. Augustine’s Doctrine of Two Cities 3.3 On the Relationship between the Church and the State 4.0 Conclusion 5.0 Summary 1.0 INTRODUCTION This unit examines the life and political ideas of St. Aurelius Augustine. Specifically, attempt is made here to identify the main contents of his teaching as expressed in the doctrine of two cities. Other issues which are treated in this unit focus on the so-called limits of political obligation and the contention on the spheres of supremacy between the church and the state. 3.0 MAIN CONTENT 3.1 Life and Times of St. Augustine St Aurelius Augustine was a great convert and pupil of St. Ambrose. Often described as the Bishop of Hippo, St Augustine’s philosophy was only in a slight degree systematic while his mind encompassed most of the learning of ancient times which was transmitted through him, to the Middle-Ages. He wrote City of God to defend Christianity against the pagan charge that it was responsible for the decline of Roman greatness and power St. Augustine restated the notion that man is a citizen of two cities- the earthly city and the city of God. This flows from the belief that man’s nature is two- fold; he is body and spirit and therefore a citizen of this world and the heavenly city at the same time. It is his view that a fundamental fact of human life is the division of human interest, the worldly interests that centre on the body and the other interest that centre on the soul which belongs to the City of God. (Sabine and Thorson; 1973). St. Augustine (also referred as Blessed Augustine) was born in Tagaste in Algeria, North Africa to a Christian mother, St. Monica and a father who remained steadfast to his traditional religion till later years in life. He resented his mother’s plea to convert to Christianity and rather preferred to romanticize with the many seductions of his era, He however converted to Christianity in 387 AD. By 391 AD, he was ordained a Priest and later Bishop of Hippo in 396 AD, a position he occupied until his death. Aurelius Augustine studied Rhetoric at Carthage and eventually worked as a teacher with it while in Carthage, Milan and Rome. He also read the works of Cicero, the Manichaean's, St. Augustine’s Doctrine of Two Cities In his work, Civitas Dei, St Augustine identified two Kingdoms which correspond to heavenly Kingdom or Civitas Dei, represented on earth by the Church and the Civitas Terrena or earthly city represented by the Holy Roman Empire. His principal logic was that the entire humanity is one but divided into these two cities, those who abide by the earthly principles and others living in accordance with the principles of the divine. St. Augustine distinguished between the two cities. He described the earthly city as founded on the earthly, appetitive and possessive impulses of the lower human nature. This refers to the kingdom of Satan The other is the City of God, the society founded in the hope of heavenly peace and spiritual salvation. It is the kingdom of Christ which embodies itself first in the Hebrew nation and later the Church and the Christianized Empire. He contends that history is replete with the struggle between these two cities and of ultimate mastery which must fall to the City of God. He insists that eternity or permanence and peace is possible only in the City of God. 3.3 On the Relationship between the Church and the State Man, he maintains is called to the universal and eternal society guided by the universal state’s relative law. He is called to a higher order, the Celestial Society, that is neither limited by time nor national or political boundaries. From this, he maintained that the Christian has to respect and obey the secular powers of course with a spirit of one destined to a higher city. St. Augustine stands as a powerful advocate for orthodoxy and of the episcopacy as the sole means for the dispensing of saving grace. It is his position that unless the state is a community for ethical purposes and unless it is held together by moral ties, it is nothing except highway robbery on a large scale. Augustine can be seen to serve as a bridge between the ancient and medieval worlds. A review of his life and work, however, shows him as an active mind engaging the practical concerns of the churches he served. It is significant to understand that the political ideas of St. Augustine like that of some other Christian Fathers emphasis the autonomy of the Church in spiritual matters and the belief that government is shared between the royalty and the clerics. The apparent interpretation is that both the church and the secular order are independent as long as each act within the sphere of its jurisdiction. This ensures that no party encroaches on the sphere of the other’s jurisdiction. UNIT 3 FEUDALISM (200-1400) CONTENTS 1.0 Introduction 2.0 Objectives 3.0 Main Content 3.1 Feudalism (200-1400) 4.0 Conclusion 5.0 Summary 1.0 INTRODUCTION The focus of this unit is on the functioning of a feudal society. Attempt is made in this section to identify which feudalism emerged and existed for over a millennium. Attempts are also made here to identify the significant features of feudalism and how it operated during the medieval age. 3.0 MAIN CONTENT 3.1 Feudalism (200-1400) Feudalism dominated the political structure of the medieval era just as city states were prevalent in the Greeko-Roman era. However, the structure and processes of feudalism was unequally developed in different times and places. For instance, the notion of serfdoms existed as early as the 5th century. However, the developed structures of feudalism emerged in the 11th and 12th centuries following the collapse of the Frankish empire. It is sometime estimated that the feudal era lasted for as long as twelve centuries in history. The feudal epoch was characterized chiefly by land ownership held in fief by serfs. Under the feudal era, public officers carry out their functions not only for national interest but also for the gains they anticipate in return usually in the form of land over which they exercise full jurisdiction. In a number of cases, a substantial part of the land went to the military leaders, the strongest of whom later became kings. The military leader handed over the seized land to their combatants for lifelong use, and later as inheritable property together with the peasants living on it. One underlying feature of the feudal era is the fact that in a period of order and threats of anarchy in medieval European societies, large political and economic units were usually impossible. As such, government tended to be restricted to a small size by modern or Roman standards. Consequently, there was a focus on the system of agriculture which made the village community and its dependent farmlands almost self-sufficing. In this situation, land emerged as a very crucial factor and important source of wealth in the feudal era. The effect of this was that every individual, including the King and his fighting forces derived their social, economic and political status and right from their relationship to land. Interestingly, the control of land became the preserve of a small community in the form of villages which also exercised customary regulations and minor police functions. The control of government and organisation of society became fundamentally local. In the feudal era, the man of small power became the dependent of someone strong enough to protect him. He was one and the same time engaged in a personal relation and property relation. Under feudalism, an individual became servants first to the lord before the state and the relationship between the individual and state were at best secondary. This is because the individual’s civic duties were first subsumed in his relationship with the feudal lords whose duty it was to protect his serfs. Those who have no fief have no lords and therefore have no rights as they have no lord to protect them. Quite often, these individuals were not considered as citizens. The consequence is that every individual seek allegiance to landlords. During the necessary time, the peasants produced what was needed for the subsistence of his family. During the surplus time, he created surplus products, which were appropriated by the feudal lords in the form of land rent (labour, rent in kind or in money). The exploitation of the peasant serfs in the form of land rent constituted the main feature of feudalism everywhere. The feudal lords could not kill their serfs but could sell them. The end of the era began with the rise of the trading cities in the twelfth century even as many of the important political consequences of feudalism appeared after that date. The entire history of feudalism was one of fierce struggle between peasants and feudal lords, and this struggle became intense with feudal uprising which shock the foundations of the feudal epoch. This struggle against the feudal lords was championed by the emerging bourgeoisie class who made use of the serf uprising to seize political and economic power. The advent of industrial revolution which ushered in new means of production and productive forces eventually led to the end of feudal epoch. Thus, signaling the advent of another mode of production called capitalism. UNIT 4 ST. THOMAS AQUINAS (1225- 1274) CONTENTS 1.0 Introduction 2.0 Objectives 3.0 Main Content 3.1 Life and times of St. Thomas Aquinas 3.2 Basic Works of St. Thomas Aquinas 3.3 St. Aquinas and the Nature of Law 3.4 St. Aquinas on the Church and State 4.0 Conclusion 5.0 Summary 1.0 INTRODUCTION This unit examines the contributions of St. Thomas Aquinas to political thought. Specifically, attempts are made to examine the life and times of St. Aquinas and how these influenced his political writings. Similarly, efforts were made to expose the student to St. Thomas notion and classification of laws and how these are linked to the contention between temporal and spiritual authorities on issues of supremacy. 3.0 MAIN CONTENT 3.1 Life and times of St. Thomas Aquinas St. Thomas Aquinas sometimes called the Angelic Doctor and the Prince of Scholastics was born in the Italian city of Roccasecca, near Naples. He joined the Dominican Order against the wishes of his mother at the age of sixteen and studied under Albertus Magnus (Albert the Great). His power is derived from God and is considered a ministry or service owed to the community of which he is the head. It is the duty of the leader to direct the actions of every class in the state that men may live a happy and virtuous life, which is the true end of man in society. It is expected that this will outlive man’s sojourn on earth to his celebration of his heavenly bliss. He was educated at the Benedictine monastery of Monte Cassino and at the University of Naples. He was greatly influenced by the teachings of Aristotle. He was ordained a priest in 1250 and began to teach at the University of Paris in 1252. In 1256, he was awarded a doctorate degree in theology and appointed professor of philosophy by the University. He was summoned to Rome in 1259 by Pope Alexander IV where he worked as adviser and teacher in the Papal court. St Aquinas returned to Paris in 1268 And left Paris for Naples in 1272 where he established a new Dominican School. He was commissioned to the Council of Lyon by Pope Gregory X in March 1274 but died shortly after. He was canonized by Pope John XXII in 1323 while Pope Pius V proclaimed him the Doctor of the Church in 1567. It is significant to observe that the work of St. Thomas Aquinas was crucial to the acceptance of the philosophy of Aristotle and its ascendancy as a cornerstone of Roman Catholic philosophy. This is because the ideas of Aristotle were initially treated with dismay and skeptism as bearing the stigma of infidelity. At this stage, the church was more inclined to ban such ideas. Similarly, the philosophy of Aristotle was forbidden at the University of Paris till 1210. He derived much of his forms of government from Aristotle’s Politics and focused his interest on the moral limitations placed on the rulers. (Sabine and Thorson) 3.2 Basic Works of St. Thomas Aquinas St. Thomas conception of social and political life falls directly into his larger plan of nature. He conceived the society as a system of ends and purposes in which the lowers serves the higher while the higher directs and guides the lower. Like Aristotle, he described the society as a mutual exchange of services for the sake of a good life to which many callings contribute. For instance, the farmer and artisan supplies material goods while the priest supply his prayers and religious observance. He argued that the common good require that such a system shall have a ruling part just as the soul rules the body or any higher nature rules the lower. From this he posits that leadership is simply an office of trust for the whole community. MODULE 3 THEORY OF NATIONAL STATE IN REFORMATION AND RENNASANCE Unit 1 Nicollo Machiavelli (1469- 1527) Unit 2 Jean Bodin (1530-1596) Unit 3 Thomas Hobbes (1588- 1679) UNIT 1 NICOLLO MACHIAVELLI (1469-1527) CONTENTS 1.0 Introduction 2.0 Objectives 3.0 Main Content 3.1 Life and times of Machiavelli 3.2 Basic Works of Machiavelli 4.0 Conclusion 5.0 Summary 1.0 INTRODUCTION This unit examines the political philosophy of Nicollo Machiavelli. It specifically focuses on the contents of The Prince which outlined strategies recommended for the political leadership in the onerous task of pursuit, maintenance and utility of state power. It is noteworthy to emphasize that Machiavelli’s ideas have attracted patronage from many modern political leaders. 3.0 MAIN CONTENT 3.1 Life and times of Machiavelli Machiavelli was a native of Florence, Italy and he served as a Diplomat and Secretary to the Second Chancery in charge of Department of War and Interior Security. Politically, he had no strait-jacket commitment to any regime. Rather he was willing to serve any government irrespective of the political group or party that assumed power. For when the Medici came to power, he began to work overtime to get in good with them. The Medici, however, never fully trusted him since he had been an important official in the Republic. He was tortured and imprisoned and later banished on exile to his country estate at San Casciano. Despite the maltreatments, Machiavelli still strived to get good with the Medicis. In his quest to regain his relevance in the government of Lorenzo de Medici, he wrote his major works while in exile at San Casciano. These works include the Discourses on the First Ten Books of Titus Livius, The Prince, and The History of Florence. In Machiavelli’s time, Italy was made up of independent warring and disunited principalities that were often prey to other European nations. Some of Machiavelli’s primary concern was the restoration of Italian glory through the unification of the disputing principalities and kingdoms. When Guilio de'Medici left Florence to become Pope Clement VII his successors poorly managed the city. The people soon overthrew the Medici rule and established the Third Republic of Florence in 1527. Machiavelli saw his chance and tried to get a position in the new republic, but the new rulers distrusted him because of his long association with the Medici. So on June 22, 1527, only a few months after the establishment of the Third Republic, Machiavelli died. 3.2 Basic Works of Machiavelli Machiavelli was the first to discuss politics and social phenomena in their own terms without recourse to ethics or jurisprudence. He divorced politics from ethics and deviated from medieval political teaching by asserting that man has no supernatural end rather, the end of man is solely on earth a . Politically, he had no strait- jacket commitment to any regime nd this centres on attaining power, greatness and fame. This helped to free the monarchs from the bondage of religion and entanglements of morals in the conduct of political actions. This is why he is sometimes described as the first modern thinker to apply scientific method to the study of politics. Machiavelli’s real politic revolves on the pursuit, attainment and sustenance of state power. His central thesis is that any means to preserve the state is legitimate. Machiavelli identified two ways of contesting for power. One is by law which is fair to man and the other is by brute which is the way of the beast. The Prince has to adopt the fox to know the snares and the lion to scare and frighten the wolves. He holds that although men naturally acknowledged and praise honest princes who keep their power by law, he however advocated that it is the crafty Princes who adopt force that are often successful. Underlying his thesis is the proclamation that the end justifies the means. It is based on this that he argued that if the Prince aim at conquering and maintaining the state, then the means will be judged honourably and praised by everyone. What Machiavelli is saying is that everything else especially religion, morality that people associate with politics should be discarded unless they help one get and keep power. Machiavelli distinguished between private and political morality and argued that both be separated in the assessment of the conducts of the Prince. He strongly advocated that the Prince should make good use of falsehood, deceits and force where necessary. The prince in his view can manipulate religion or renege on agreement, employ cruelty, murder and fraud in his quest for the attainment, maintenance and utility of state power but that this must be done neatly so as to be admired by his subjects. The single most articulated value in the work of Machiavelli is virtú (manly), which he described as the ability to enforce one’s will on volatile social situations. This can be done through a combination of strong will, strength, brilliance and strategic and strategic thinking exerted towards the world on the one hand, or Fortune, He was branded an anti-Christ throughout the Renaissance because of his refusal to accommodate ethical considerations in political theory. It will help to understand that Machiavelli was not talking about the state so much in ethical terms but in medical terms. For Machiavelli believed that the Italian situation was desperate and that the Florentine state was in grave danger. Machiavelli was genuinely concerned with healing the state to make it stronger. He identified one main skill, which is vital to the game of power, as sound calculation. The social and political world of the The Prince is monstrously unpredictable and volatile; Machiavelli argues that any moral judgment should be secondary to getting, increasing and maintaining power. The answer to the above question, for instance, is “it’s good to be true to your word, but you should lie whenever it advances your power or security—not only that, it's necessary.” UNIT 2 JEAN BODIN (1530-1596) CONTENTS 1.0 Introduction 2.0 Objectives 3.0 Main Content 3.1 Life and Times of Jean Bodin 3.2 Basic Works of Bodin 4.0 Conclusion 5.0 Summary 1.0 INTRODUCTION This unit examines the writings of Jean Bodin and how this relates to the prevailing orientation of political theories in the Age of Renaissance. Bodin’s focus on sovereignty attracts attention in this unit. This is because Jean Bodin sought to liberate the temporal rulers from the dogma of religion. 3.0 MAIN CONTENT 3.1 Life and Times of Jean Bodin Bodin was a French political philosopher, a lawyer and statesman. He was born in Anger and studied law at the University of Toulouse. In 1576, he published Six Livres de la Republic (Six Books of the Republic). The book was occasioned by the civil war in France and was designed to strengthen the king in an era when France was disturbed by wars and anarchies of wars. He advocated for absolutism of the state as a strategy to tackle the situation. For him, the sovereignty of the state should be recognised and explored to maintain order. In another of his works, Republic, he liberated the idea of sovereign power from the limbo of theology. The work which was published four year after the massacre of St. Bartholomew was described as a defence of politics against parties. It formed the main intellectual anchor of a growing body of moderate thinkers, known as the Politique who represented strong central government which usually come in time of disorder. This group of scholars perceived the royal power as the only stay of peace and order and therefore advocated for monarchy as the centre of national unity, over and above all religious sects and political parties. Though members of Politique were mostly Roman Catholics by religious affiliation, they were among the first set of groups who accommodated the co-existence of different religions within one state. Bodin favoured the historical and comparative study of law as against the exclusive development of Roman law. In his view, both law and politics should be studied not only in the light of history but also in the light of man’s physical environment, of climate, race and topography. Environment here, include the influence of the stars and the study of astrology. 3.2 Basic Works of Bodin Bodin conceives the family as the natural community from which other societies including the state and private property emanates. The family here implies the father, mother, children, servants and common property. a He subscribed to the Roman conception that state jurisdiction ends at the threshold of the house from which he proposed the extreme control by the pater familias over his dependents including his slaves and property. It is the pater familias who becomes a citizen when he steps outside the house and acts in concert with other family heads. He further reasoned that many associations of family in search of common defence and mutual advantages merge to form villages, cities and corporation. mostly through force when these associations are united in a sovereign authority. Although Bodin attributed the origin of state to conquest, he was however reluctant to justify force as an important attribute of the state after it is established. He further noted that a well ordered state cannot exist until a sovereign power is recognised over the units of families which make it. He distinguished state from band of robbers by observing that the state exerts lawful coercion which distinguishes it from band of robbers who strive on force. Jean Bodin had no clear theory of the end of the state which he defined as a lawful government of several households, of their common possession with sovereign power. He was however indefinite with regards to the end which the state should pursue for its members. For instance, while he observed that the pursuit of happiness which in the views of Aristotle was the end of the state was insufficient to the aspirations of his era, he was also reluctant to restrict the state to the quest for material and utilitarian advantages such as peace and security of property. Writing on sovereignty, he maintained that the presence of sovereign power is the most important distinguishing feature between the state and all other associations in the society. He examined the end of the state and family, marriage, private property and slavery and supported the blend of philosophy and history. MODULE UNIT 3 THOMAS HOBBES (1588- 1679) CONTENTS 1.0 Introduction 2.0 Objectives 3.0 Main Content 3.1 Life and Times of Thomas Hobbes 3.2 Hobbes and the Social Contract Theory 4.0 Conclusion 5.0 Summary 6.0 Tutor-Marked Assignment 1.0 INTRODUCTION This unit focuses on the political ideas of Thomas Hobbes. Emphasis was placed on his doctrine of social contract where Hobbes explained his rationale for the emergence of the state. Furthermore, attempts are made in this unit to x-ray the life and times of Hobbes and how political events of his time contributed to shape his perception of political reality. 3.0 MAIN CONTENT 3.1 Life and Times of Thomas Hobbes Hobbes was an English Philosopher and political theorist who witnessed the puritan revolution and the English civil wars. He was educated in Oxford as a classicist and served as a tutor of William Cavendish. He later exiled voluntarily to Holland during the years of Parliamentary Rule as a result of his belief in absolute government where he devoted much of his time to the development and expression of a comprehensive philosophical vision of the mechanistic operation of natur He returned to England after the restoration of Charles II and remained engaged in bitter political and religious controversies for the rest of his life while producing the English translation of the works of Homer. The moral and material devastation of these turbulent events are significant in explaining the nature of his political thought as contained in his work Leviathan in which he advocated for the absolutism of the ruler. Hobbes’s first systematic statement of political philosophy, Elements of Law, Nature and Politics (1640), relies heavily upon the conception of natural law that had dominated the tradition from Thomas Aquinas to Hugo Grotius. There was however some shift in his views two years later when he released the Latin version of his work known as De Cive (1642). 3.2 Hobbes and the Social Contract Theory Hobbes began his political inquiry with an analysis of the human nature. For him, man is essentially selfish and is moved into action not by reason but by his emotions. He argues that man originally lived in a condition of natural warfare, that is, a state of homo homini lupus wherein man is wolf to his fellow man. This is the state of nature in which men lived without any form of government or political authority over them. Hobbes qualified this as the condition of warre, that is, everyman against everyman. This is a situation characterized by a perpetual struggle of all against all. He argues that man originally lived in a condition of natural warfare, that is, a state of homo homini lupus wherein man is wolf to his fellow man. This is the state of nature in which men lived without any form of government or political authority over them. Hobbes qualified this as the condition of warre, that is, everyman against every man This is a situation characterized by a perpetual struggle of all against all In his attempt to explain this stage of human existence, Hobbes argued that since men are by nature equal and each man has aspirations which he sought to achieve, that the pursuits of such desired ends will lead to conflict and war resulting from competition, diffidence and love for glory. Since law and justice were absent, the life of man for Hobbes was solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short. This is the Hobbessian state of nature where there exist, no right, no wrong. Nothing is unjust and no common power over men. However, there was the fear of death and desire for peace and security. It is these conditions that propels man to enter into a bond or contract which culminated in the emergence of the state and civil society. Thus, Hobbes maintains that the only way to peace is for men to surrender all their rights to a supreme coercive power, the leviathan. The contracting parties here as observed by Appadorai are not the community and the government, but subjects all of who will boldly surrender all their right to the Leviathan on the condition that everyone does same. From this contract, a state is created and this state must possess a government which is absolutely sovereign. This sovereignty is not held on condition because the sovereign is not party to the pact, but a result of it. The pact is not revocable at the pleasure of the subjects because men surrendered all their right to rebel to the sovereign. Here, the law is in general not counsel, but command. Hobbes concept of the sovereign need not necessarily be one man but may be located in an assembly of men who must perform the functions of the modern day government. It is important to note that Hobbes described the covenant through the individuals surrender their rights to self government as leading to the establishment of a common power, that is, a unity which has the power to enforce the contract. The Sovereign and the Sovereignty Hobbes located sovereignty in the commonwealth or Leviathan. In his view, sovereignty implies authority in all spheres of state activity. Here, the sovereign refers to one who takes up the person of the commonwealth and there could be no limitation to his authority. It is his view that the rights and faculties of the sovereign are as follows 1. The covenant of the social contract establishes the sovereign permanently and absolutely in power. The citizens are bound by the covenant 2. Sovereign power cannot be lost, since the sovereign is not a party to the covenant but product of it. This also implies that the sovereign cannot violate any part of the covenant. 3. It is unjust for one to contravene the institution of the sovereign by the majority. Rather, he is obliged to consent to the majority. 4. subjects cannot accuse the sovereign of injustice since they mandated all his actions. 5. Since the sovereign is the author of peace and defence, he has right to determine the means to pursue these ends. Consequently, he is the judge of whatsoever doctrine he adopts for the pursuit of peace and defence of the commonwealth. 6. The sovereign has the power to hearing and deciding on disputes in legal and factual terms. 8. He has the right to make war and peace as he deems necessary. 9. The sovereign has the powers to choose his counselors, ministers, magistrates and officers of the commonwealth both in peace and 10. The sovereign has the right to punish offences or reward good life. 11. The sovereign has indivisible rights and powers. It is the powers that distinguish the sovereign. Hobbes identified three possible types of commonwealth in which the sovereign can operate. These are as follows: • Monarchy which implies a situation where an king assumes power of the sovereign. • Aristocracy which implies an assembly of a part of all the people.
• Democracy which implies an assembly of all
that will come together without distinction to assume the person of the entire people. Hobbes further identified other reasons which extol monarchy over other forms of government. Prominent among these reasons are: • The monarch being able to choose his advisers gets better informed than the sovereign assembly (democracy or aristocracy) • Resolutions of the monarch are subject only to the inconsistence of human nature, 3. Sovereign dispossess subjects to enrich their favourites and flatters, . TUTOR-MARKED ASSIGNMENT 1. Tacitly describe the Hobbessian notion of social contract. 2. To what extent do the ideas of Thomas Hobbes reflect the orientations of political theory in the Era of Reformation? 3. Highlight the significant attributes of Hobbes concept of sovereignty. MODULE 4 ERA OF REASON AND ENLIGHTENMENT Unit 1 John Locke (1632-1704) Unit 2 Jean Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778) Unit 3 G.W.F. Hegel (1770 – 1831) Unit 4 Utilitarian School Unit 5 John Stuart Mill (1806-1873) Unit 6 Karl Marx (1818-1883) UNIT 1 JOHN LOCKE (1632-1704) CONTENTS 1.0 Introduction 2.0 Objectives 3.0 Main Content 3.1 Life and Times of John Locke 3.2 Basic Works of Locke 3.3 Locke’s Doctrine of Social Contract 4.0 Conclusion 5.0 Summary 6.0 Tutor-Marked Assignment 1.0 INTRODUCTION This unit examines the contributions of John Locke to political philosophy. It highlights the events in Locke’s life which helped to shape his political ideas. Specific attention is focused on Locke’s theory of social contract. This exposes a remarkable disparity between the ideas of Thomas Hobbes and John Locke. However, one central underlying fact is their focus on the reason of government and nature of political obligation. 2.0 OBJECTIVES At the end of this unit, you should be able to: • examine the contributions of John Locke to political philosophy • get exposed to the political ideas of John Locke • the reveal the nature of political theory in the age of enlightenment. 3.0 MAIN CONTENT 3.1 Life and Times of John Locke Locke was born in Wrington to Puritan parents of modest means. He was a British philosopher, Oxford academic and medical researcher who became a successful government official charged with collecting information about trade and colonies. He later became an economic writer, opposition political activist, and finally a revolutionary whose cause ultimately triumphed in the Glorious Revolution of 1688. In a nutshell, he was one of the greatest philosophers in Europe at the end of the seventeenth century. Locke had what in his time was described an excellent education. In 1647 Locke went to Westminster School in London. From Westminster school he went to Christ Church, Oxford, in the autumn of 1652 at the age of twenty where he received a Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts in 1656 and 1658. He eventually became a lecturer at Christ Church School in 1660. He spent sometime serving in the government of Shaftesbury but went back to Oxford in 1674 where he acquired the degree Bachelor of medicine, and a license to practice medicine. He fled to Holland on exile as a result of his sympathies for anti- state elements committed to the overthrow of King Charles and his brother James. While in exile Locke finished An Essay Concerning Human Understanding and published a fifty page advanced notice of it in French. His close association with English revolutionaries in exile made the English government to withdraw his studentship at Oxford. While Locke was living in exile in Holland, Charles II died on 6 February 1685 and was succeeded by his brother — who became James II of England. William of Orange eventually drove him away with the help of Dutch during the Glorious Revolution of 1688. The success of the revolution marked a watershed in English history. It resulted in the transfer of royal powers from the King to the Parliament. Locke returned to England in 1688 on board the royal yacht, accompanying Princess Mary on her voyage to join her husband and later died in 1704. Locke wrote a variety of important political, religious and educational works including the An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, Two Treatises of Government, the Letters Concerning Toleration, The Reasonableness of Christianity and Some Thoughts Concerning Education. Locke's work reveals his strong aversion to authoritarianism. He maintained that the individual should apply reason to search after truth rather than simply accept the opinion of authorities or be subject to superstition. He also insisted that there must be apparent distinction between legitimate and illegitimate functions of institutions in a bid to legitimate the utility of force by these institutions.