Editor’s Note: Liberalism refers to self-government’s doctrine, not progressive politics.
The breakdown of a free civilization starts in the shadow. An urge to control originates in our unconscious minds, which comes from fear. Some project that urge, rationalize it, and then try to impose it on the world as a political ideology.Â
Such projections can act as a veil of illusion between ourselves and the world, causing us to fail to see reality, and tempting us to submit and embrace the mechanisms of compulsion. From these shadow impulses, powerful concepts have emerged to threaten what remains of the liberal order.
The first comes from the philosopher Thomas Hobbes.Â
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Hobbes’s most famous work is Leviathan (1651), in which he laid out his views on the social contract and the necessity of a strong central authority to maintain civil society. Hobbes wrote during great political turmoil — the English Civil War — and his work reflects that era’s chaos and insecurity.
According to Hobbes, individuals come together to form a social contract, agreeing to give up certain freedoms and submit to authority in exchange for protection and order. The sovereign—be it a monarch, assembly, or legislature—must then provide that security. Failure to do so breaks the “social contract,” absolving citizens of their obligations to obey.
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