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:This article is about the philosopher Thomas Hobbes. For information on the Bill Watterson comic strip featuring a tiger named Hobbes, see Calvin and Hobbes.

Thomas Hobbes: detail from a portrait by John Michael Wright ( National Portrait Gallery, London)

Thomas Hobbes ( April 5, 1588 - December 4, 1679) was a noted English political philosopher, most famous for his book Leviathan ( 1651).

Hobbes also wrote numerous other books on political philosophy and other matters, providing an account of human nature as self-interested co-operation. He was a contemporary of Descartes and wrote one of the replies to Descartes' Meditations.

1 Early life and education

Hobbes was born at Westport, Wiltshire on April 5, 1588. His father, the vicarIn the broadest sense, a vicar is anyone who is acting as a substitute or agent for a superior (compare "vicarious"). In this sense, the title is comparable to lieutenant''. Usually the title appears in a number of Christian ecclesiastical contexts, but i of Charlton and Westport, was forced to leave the town, abandoning his three children to the care of an elder brother Francis. Hobbes was educated at Westport church from the age of four, passed to the MalmesburyMalmesbury is an old-established city in north-west Wiltshire on the South Cotswolds. Located in south west England, it is close to Cirencester, Chippenham and Swindon. It is surrounded by rivers on three sides. Malmesbury is the oldest borough in England school and then to a private school kept by a young man named Robert Latimer, a graduate from Oxford University. Hobbes was a good pupil and around 1603 he was sent to Oxford and entered at Magdalen Hall. The principal of Magdalen was the aggressive PuritanThe Puritans were members of a group of radical Protestants which developed in England after the Reformation. Terminology The word puritan is now applied unevenly to a number of Protestant churches from the late sixteenth century to the early eighteenth c John Wilkinson and he had some influence on Hobbes.

At university Hobbes appears to have followed his own curriculum, he was "little attracted by the scholastic learning". He did not complete his degree until 1608Events October 2 Dutch lensmaker Hans Lippershey demonstrates the first telescope in the Dutch parliament July 3 Quebec City founded by Samuel de Champlain. August 24 The first official English representative to India lands at Surat. Swedish troops enter but he was recommended by Wilkinson as tutor to William, the son of William Cavendish , baron of Hardwick (and later earl of Devonshire), and began a lifelong connection with that family.

Hobbes became a companion to the younger William and they both took part in a grand tour in 1610. Hobbes was exposed to European scientific and critical methods during the tour in contrast to the scholastic philosophy which he had learned in Oxford. His scholarly efforts at the time were aimed at a careful study of classic Greek and Latin authors, the outcome of which was, in 1628, his great translation of Thucydides. Hobbes believed that Thucydides' account of the Peloponnesian War showed that democratic government could not survive war and was thus undesirable.

Although he associated with literary figures like Ben Jonson and thinkers such as Francis Bacon he did not extend his efforts into philosophy until after 1629. His employer Cavendish, then the Earl of Devonshire, died of the plague in June 1628. The widowed countess dismissed Hobbes but he soon found work, again a tutor, this time to the son of Sir Gervase Clifton. This task, chiefly spent in Paris, ended in 1631 when he again found work with the Cavendish family, tutoring the son of his previous pupil. Over the next seven years as well as tutoring he expanded his own knowledge of philosophy, awakening in him curiosity over key philosophic debates. He visited Florence in 1636 and later was a regular debater in philosophic groups in Paris, held together by Marin Mersenne. From 1637 he considered himself a philosopher.



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