Jump to content

Bellum omnium contra omnes

From Wiki Knights Errant Life
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

Template:Short description

Template:Italic title

The Præfatio (Preface) of De Cive where the phrase Template:Lang appears for the first time.[1] Taken from the revised edition printed in 1647 at Amsterdam (apud L. Elzevirium).[2]

Template:Lang, a Latin phrase meaning "the war of all against all", is the description that Thomas Hobbes gives to human existence in the state-of-nature thought experiment that he conducts in De Cive (1642) and Leviathan (1651). The common modern English usage is a war of "each against all" where war is rare and terms such as "competition" or "struggle" are more common.[3]

Thomas Hobbes' use

In Leviathan itself,[4] Hobbes speaks of 'warre of every one against every one',[5] of 'a war [...] of every man against every man'[6] and of 'a perpetuall warre of every man against his neighbour',[4][7] but the Latin phrase occurs in De Cive: Template:Quote

Later on, two slightly modified versions are presented in De Cive: Template:Quote

Template:Quote

In chapter XIII of Leviathan,[8] Hobbes explains the concept with these words: Template:Quote

The thought experiment places people in a pre-social condition, and theorizes what would happen in such a condition. According to Hobbes, the outcome is that people choose to enter a social contract, giving up some of their liberties in order to enjoy peace. This thought experiment is a test for the legitimation of a state in fulfilling its role as "sovereign" to guarantee social order, and for comparing different types of states on that basis.

Hobbes distinguishes between war and battle: war does not only consist of actual battle; it points to the situation in which one knows there is a 'Will to contend by Battle'.[9]

Later uses

In his Notes on the State of Virginia (1785), Thomas Jefferson uses the phrase Template:Langx ("war of all things against all things", assuming Template:Langx is intended to be neuter like Template:Langx) as he laments that the constitution of that state was twice at risk of being sacrificed to the nomination of a dictator after the manner of the Roman Republic.[10]

The phrase was sometimes used by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels:

Template:Quote

Template:Quote

The English translation eliminates the Latin phrase used in the original German.[11]
  • In a letter from Marx to Engels (18 June 1862):

Template:Quote

  • In a letter to Pyotr Lavrov (London, 12–17 November 1875), Engels is expressed clearly against any attempt to legitimize the trend anthropomorphizing human nature to the distorted view of natural selection:

Template:Quote

Template:Quote

  • Max Stirner also used the term in his book "The One and his own".
  • Rudolf Steiner describes it with the term "war of all against all" a future epoch, when the human race will be submitted to a powerful selfishness.Template:Cn

See also

Template:Cols

Template:Colend

References


Template:Thomas Hobbes Template:Political philosophy