



Study with the several resources on Docsity
Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan
Prepare for your exams
Study with the several resources on Docsity
Earn points to download
Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan
Community
Ask the community for help and clear up your study doubts
Discover the best universities in your country according to Docsity users
Free resources
Download our free guides on studying techniques, anxiety management strategies, and thesis advice from Docsity tutors
Social contract theory is that beginning man lived in the nature state and comparison of social contract theories hobbes, locke and rousseau.
Typology: Study notes
1 / 5
This page cannot be seen from the preview
Don't miss anything!
The social contract theory is not only the most ancient but also the most famous of the theories regarding the origin of the state.
Political thinkers have attempted to explain the origin of the state in various ways. When, where and how the state came into existence have not been recorded anywhere in history. Therefore, the political thinkers were compelled to adopt various hypotheses, many of which are now discredited in the light of modern knowledge. Among the many theories which are concerned with the origin of the state the following are explained in this chapter.
according to his own wish and fancies. No man made laws were there to control man. The law known to men living in the state of nature was the law of nature or natural law. There was none to interpret the law or adjudicate. Hence men lived under uncertain conditions. When men felt the need to escape from this type of life he did so by common agreement or contract. As a result of this, a civil society was created. Thus creation of civil society preceded the emergence of the state. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the supporters of the social contract theory multiplied and there was more or less universal acceptance of the doctrine. Hooker was the first scientific writer who gave a logical exposition of the theory of social contract. The theory found real support in the writings of Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, Jean Jacques Rousseau who are known as contractualists.
Principal works Leviathan (1651): Man egoistic moved by fear, power glory political equality of all no question of right or wrong. Just or unjust war of all against all, life, nasty, brutish and short. Civil government (1690): A state of good will, mutual existence and preservation state of peace not war governed by law of nature but state became necessary to have one standardized interpretation of law of nature. Social contract (1762): Men in state of nature equal self sufficient and contended, lived life of idyllic, happiness man actuated (operated) by impulse and not reason, origin of property creates in-equality necessity of state.
Principal works Leviathan (1651): In state of nature there was no civil law, law of nature was regulative of human action, law of nature conceived differently by Hobbes to mean different things on different occasions i.e.(a) it was dicate of right reason for preservation of life. (b) It was based on prudence which dictated that everybody should try to secure peace by sacrificing natural right by convenants and it must be respected.
represents a limitation on government. Locke conceives of popular and not le-gal sovereignty. Social contract (1762): The corporate whole that is people as a whole are sovereign. Thus Rousseau believes in popular sovereignty. People are the legal sovereign. Sovereignty resides in the 'general will ‘of the people. The characteristics of this sovereignty are its unity, individuality, permanencies, in alienability and its absolute and unrepresentable character. The government is dependent on the sovereign of the people. Rousseau distinguishes between the sovereign state and subordinate government.
In the state of nature liberty depends upon the state and is guaranteed by the state. It is a gift of the state and can be abrogated by the state. It cannot be quoted against the authority of the state. A man has certain rights inherent in him i.e. rights to life, liberty and property which the state can-not deprive him of In the civil state individual liberty is a gift of the sovereign state. It must be reconciled with the absolute authority of the state and cannot be quoted against the same.
Principal works Leviathan (1651): The Hobbesian individual owes everything i.e. rights peace and law to the state and is there-fore best in the state. He must obey the sovereign and pay taxes. Individual has some kind of liberty even in the civil state i.e. (a) Liberty not to kill himself if asked to do so by the sovereign. (b) Liberty to life which enables him to resist the sovereign if the latter at-tacks his life. (c) Liberty to refuse allegiance to a sovereign who cannot save his life or to a deposed sovereign.
Rousseau had drawn something from Hobbes and something from Locke. In fact he began with the method of Locke and ended with those of Hobbes. Both Rousseau and Locke agreed
that man in the state of nature was free and happy. Formation of civil society by means of a contract was deemed the only way out. Both Locke and Rousseau made the distinction between the state and government though Rousseau maintained that the institution of government was not the results of contract. Both believed that the contract did not remove the supreme power from the people. Rousseau's voice is the voice of Locke but the hands are those of Hobbes.
The social contract theory as expounded by Hobbes, Locke and Rousseau does not explain the origin of the state. There is no evidence to support this theory. The contention of these philosophers is not borne out by facts. What was contributed by Hobbes to political philosophy was absolutism. Locke gave recognition to the concept of limited government. Rousseau popularised the idea of popular sovereignty.
The doctrine that the state originated in a contract was a favourite home of political speculation during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Historically the theory is a mere fiction. There is nothing in the whole range of history to show that the state has ever been deliberately created as a result of voluntary agreement. Primitive man did not posses that maturity of outlook which the making of social contract presupposes. The social contract theory is unhistorical. It is merely a fiction. The social contract theory is also attacked on legal grounds. It is contended that a legally sound contract implies the prior existence of some authority and its sanction before the contract implies the contract is entered into. In the case of social contract theory there was neither the authority nor the sanction before the contract was concluded. The social contract theory is also criticised on philosophical grounds. The social contract theory is criticised as bad history, bad law and bad philosophy. It is bad philosophy, because it looks upon the state as an artificial contrivance and not a natural process of growth.