Reading Group in Early Modern Philosophy, Spring 2021: Hobbes

Coordinator: Claudia Dumitru (Princeton University)

Thursdays/6-8 PM Bucharest time/via Zoom

This is a reading group that will meet weekly for two hours during the spring semester, to discuss a selection of texts by Thomas Hobbes. The guiding theme will be the relationship between Hobbes’s political philosophy and the other parts of his system (e.g. his natural philosophy). We will be discussing topics such as: Hobbes’s definition of philosophy and science, his method in natural philosophy and political philosophy, his materialist anthropology, the role of self-knowledge for political philosophy etc.

These are all topics that have an extensive secondary literature around them—I will propose some questions and interpretations raised by this scholarship as starting points for discussion (and indicate the sources for further reading), but we will mostly be focusing on primary texts. We will read chapters from Hobbes’s political works (mainly the Leviathan and the Elements of Law) as well as from his De Corpore.

Audience: The reading group is aimed advanced undergraduate and master students, though anyone else is welcome to join as well. No familiarity with Hobbes or early modern philosophy required. We’ll have 25-50 pages of primary text to read per week. I might add other primary texts or secondary literature as we go along, but only as optional readings. The texts we discuss will be in English. We can decide together what language our discussion will be in.

Logistics: If you want to sign up, please give Dana Jalobeanu your email address (or email me directly at cdumitru@princeton.edu). I will email you the Zoom link for the meeting and a link to a folder with the texts.

Venue

Readings:

  1.  February 18: short intro session

No reading, but feel free to look over Hobbes’ verse autobiography or Aubrey’s Brief Life of Hobbes. I will say a few things about Hobbes, the texts we are reading, and what I am hoping we’ll discuss in the reading group.

       2. February 25: setting the scene

Epistle Dedicatory to The Elements of Law, Epistle Dedicatory & Preface to the Reader to De Cive, Epistle Dedicatory & Introduction to Leviathan, Epistle Dedicatory to De Corpore

      3. March 4: science and philosophy

De Corpore, chapters 1 & 6; Leviathan, chapter 6, De Homine, chapter 10

  1. March 11: physics and sense perception

De Corpore, chapter 25; Leviathan, chapters 1-2; Elements of Law, chapter 2-3;

See a synopsys of the meeting here (in Romanian)

  1. March 18: space, time, and motion in De Corpore

De Corpore, chapters 7 & 15.

  1. March 25: sense and imagination

Leviathan, chapters 1-2; Elements of Law, chapter 2-3.

  1. April 1: the passions

Leviathan, chapter 6.

  1. April 8: reason

Leviathan, chapter 5.

  1. April 15: the commonwealth (I)

Leviathan, chapters 14-17

  1. April 22: the commonwealth (II)

Leviathan, chapters 18-25.

  1. April 29: spring break

 

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