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58 pages 1 hour read

Thomas Hobbes

Leviathan

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 1651

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Symbols & Motifs

Leviathan

In the Book of Job the leviathan is described as a fearsome sea monster of unspeakable power that is controlled by God. No one who meets the leviathan can be reasonably expected to survive the encounter. For that reason, it may seem odd for Hobbes to frame an argument for how humans can live peaceably around a figure of such astonishing violence. At the same time, Hobbes makes it abundantly clear that the obedience required of the social contract between sovereign and subject is built upon the basis of fear. Only through sufficient awe of the sovereign’s power—akin to what a person might feel upon encountering the leviathan—will that contract stand and internal peace persist. Moreover, the fact that the leviathan is essentially an agent of God allows Hobbes to reject the divine right of kings while still admitting that the sovereign’s power—like all power—comes from God.

One can also interpret the symbol of the leviathan from an etymological perspective. The word is believed to have been derived from the Hebrew words lavah and thannin. While thannin means dragon, lavah means “to couple together.” Particularly in the context of the book’s frontispiece, in which the sovereign is a giant figure made up of the bodies of his subjects, Hobbes’s intent may be to suggest that the sovereign represents the collective wills of his subjects, transferred to the ruler through the covenant between them.

The Body Politic

At various points Hobbes likens the commonwealth to a human body and brain, using the medieval metaphor of the body politic to describe it. For example, he refers to the offices of judges as the body’s joints, punishment and rewards as its nerves, counselors as its memory, and laws as its sense of reason. More frequently, however, Hobbes employs this extended metaphor in his diagnosis of various diseases that may afflict a commonwealth and cause its unjust dissolution. When its citizens are unduly moved by spiritual or ghostly authority, he calls it epilepsy. A lack of treasury funds caused by subjects’ reluctance to pay taxes results in clogged arteries and a lack of blood flow to the heart. Too many corporations are likened to intestinal parasites, which sap the body of nutrition. And popular demagogues who incite the citizenry to rebellion produce the effects one might see in a victim of witchcraft.

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