Passion and Reason in Thomas Hobbes

Authors

  • Jorge Alfonso Vargas Universidad de Tarapacá
  • Alex Espinoza Universidad de Tarapacá

Keywords:

Reason, passion, imagination, understanding

Abstract

The study determines the relationship between passion and reason in Thomas Hobbes. The English thinker is considered as a rationalist as well as an irrationalist.
To explain this apparent paradox, the authors review his notions of passion and reason in the context of his materialistic and physicalistic philosophy. As well as, the connection with his nominalism and sensualism. Passions are shown as the principle of movement in men, thought being at its service. The rational process is described as part of a new logic, the one of calculus, or computation. The conclusion is that both topics are not clearly connected in Hobbes’s work despite his effort of making power, the strongest passion, the one that can introduce order in thought.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Jorge Alfonso Vargas, Universidad de Tarapacá

Universidad de Tarapacá
Facultad de Educación y Humanidades
18 de Septiembre 2222, Campus Saucache
Arica (Chile)

Alex Espinoza, Universidad de Tarapacá


Facultad de Ciencias Sociales y Jurídicas
18 de septiembre 2222, Campus Saucache
Arica (Chile)

Published

2019-01-17

How to Cite

Vargas, J. A., & Espinoza, A. (2019). Passion and Reason in Thomas Hobbes. ALPHA. Revista De Artes, Letras Y Filosofía, 1(26), 135–152. Retrieved from https://revistas.ulagos.cl/index.php/alpha/article/view/1928

Issue

Section

Articles