PLSC 118: The Moral Foundations of Politics
Lecture 13 - Appropriating Locke Today. The final Enlightenment tradition left to be explored in this course is social contract theory, for which we must return to Locke and somehow secularize his views and reconcile them with the refutation of natural rights. Modern social contract theorists replace natural rights with Kant's categorical imperatives, and accept the Aristotelian notion that there is no such thing as pre-political man. They approach the social contract as a hypothetical thought experiment, asking, if there were no state, what kind of state, if any, would people like you and I create? The first modern social contract theorist Professor Shapiro introduces is Robert Nozick, whose theory derives from the voluntary entry of individuals into mutual protective associations in the absence of a state. But he also makes two important points about force: (1) for coercive force to be a good, it has to be exercised as a monopoly, and (2) there's no other natural monopoly. Therefore, a dominant protective association will come out on top and resemble the state. But one problem remains: the incorporation of independents into this state. (from oyc.yale.edu)
Lecture 13 - Appropriating Locke Today |
Time | Lecture Chapters |
[00:00:00] | 1. The Social Contract Tradition: Robert Nozick (1938-2002) |
[00:22:58] | 2. Kant, Nozick and the Conception of Individual Liberty |
[00:32:53] | 3. Evolution of the State without Rights Violations |
References |
Lecture 13 - Appropriating Locke Today Instructor: Professor Ian Shapiro. Resources: Notes: Nozick [PDF]. Transcript [html]. Audio [mp3]. Download Video [mov]. |
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