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Leviathans Old and New: What Collingwood Saw in Hobbes
Authors:Robin Douglass
Institution:1. Department of Political Economy, Kings College London, UKrobin.douglass@kcl.ac.ukORCID Iconhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-0939-6211
Abstract:Summary

R. G. Collingwood presented his major work of political philosophy, The New Leviathan, as an updated version of Thomas Hobbes's Leviathan. However, his reasons for taking Hobbes's great work as his inspiration have puzzled and eluded many Collingwood scholars, while those interested in the reception of Hobbes's ideas have largely neglected the New Leviathan. In this essay I reveal what Collingwood saw in Hobbes's political philosophy and show how his reading of Hobbes both diverges from other prominent interpretations of the time and invites us to reassess Hobbes's complex association with the origins of liberalism. In doing so, I focus on Collingwood's science of mind, his ideas on society and authority, and his dialectical theory of politics, in each case showing how he engaged with Hobbes in order to elucidate his own vision of civilisation. That vision is based on the development of social consciousness, which involves people coming to understand the body politic as a joint enterprise whereby they confer authority upon those who rule.
Keywords:R  G  Collingwood  Thomas Hobbes  civilisation  society  authority  liberalism
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