Table of Contents
Editor's Foreword
Introductory Remarks
Texts Cited
Introduction: Remarks on Political Philosophy
Lectures on Hobbes
Lecture I: Hobbes's Secular Moralism and the Role of His Social Contract
Lecture II: Human Nature and the State of Nature
Lecture III: Hobbes's Account of Practical Reasoning
Lecture IV: The Role and Powers of the Sovereign
Appendix: Hobbes Index
Lectures on Locke
Lecture I: His Doctrine of Natural Law
Lecture II: His Account of a Legitimate Regime
Lecture III: Property and the Class State
Lectures on Hume
Lecture I: "Of the Original Contract"
Lecture II: Utility, Justice, and the Judicious Spectator
Lectures on Rousseau
Lecture I: The Social Contract: Its Problem
Lecture II: The Social Contract: Assumptions and the General Will (I)
Lecture III: The General Will (II) and the Question of Stability
Lectures on Mill
Lecture I: His Conception of Utility
Lecture II: His Account of Justice
Lecture III: The Principle of Liberty
Lecture IV: His Doctrine as a Whole
Appendix: Remarks on Mill's Social Theory
Lectures on Marx
Lecture I: His View of Capitalism as a Social System
Lecture II: His Conception of Right and Justice
Lecture III: His Ideal: A Society of Freely Associated Producers
APPENDIXES
Four Lectures on Henry Sidgwick
Lecture I: Sidgwick's Methods of Ethics
Lecture II: Sidgwick on Justice and on the Classical Principle of Utility
Lecture III: Sidgwick's Utilitarianism
Lecture IV: Summary of Utilitarianism
Five Lectures on Joseph Butler
Lecture I: The Moral Constitution of Human Nature
Lecture II: The Nature and Authority of Conscience
Lecture III: The Economy of the Passions
Lecture IV: Butler's Argument against Egoism
Lecture V: Supposed Conflict between Conscience and Self-Love
Appendix: Additional Notes on Butler
Course Outline
Index