Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) is widely regarded as one of the most important political thinkers in the Western tradition. Justice is one of the main political concepts today. This is the first book-length analysis of Hobbes's ideas on justice.
Hobbes made many startling claims about justice. Norms of justice have no place outside the commonwealth, the civil law determines what is just and unjust, and nothing sovereigns do is unjust to their citizens. But what exactly did Hobbes mean by justice? And how did he convince his audience that he was speaking about justice when advancing such controversial views, and not about something else?
In Hobbes on Justice, Olsthoorn traces the place of justice in Hobbes's moral, legal, political, and international thought as developed over time. The book reconstructs his idiosyncratic glosses on notions like justice, rights, injury, obligation, and law; proposes new solutions to some long-standing interpretive puzzles; and provides in-depth discussions of property, slavery, treason, just war and other neglected aspects of Hobbes's thought. Olsthoorn shows, convincingly, that Hobbes's theory of justice doubled as a civil theodicy: it aimed to morally empower sovereign rulers by vindicating them from all stains of injustice, no matter how horrid their rule.
Combining analytic philosophy, intellectual history, and political theory, this major new study of Thomas Hobbes will be of wide and cross-disciplinary interest to scholars of philosophy, law, politics, and history.
Industry Reviews
Johan Olsthoorn is one of the most astute commentators on Hobbes's moral and political philosophy writing today. His book is scholarly, rigorously argued, and full of insight. No serious student of Hobbes's philosophy can afford to forgo grappling with Olsthoorn's reading. * Professor Arash Abizadeh, McGill University *
Hobbes on Justice is a remarkable book, setting new standards in terms of the philosophical rigour and historical sensitivity with which Hobbes's arguments are distilled, analysed, and reconstructed. In supplying the most comprehensive and nuanced treatment of Hobbes's account of justice to date, Olsthoorn deepens and complicates our understanding of Hobbes's wider moral, political, and legal thought. This book is essential reading for anyone interested in either Hobbes's philosophy or the history of ideas of justice. * Robin Douglass Professor of Political Theory Department of Political Economy, King's College London *