Laurens van Apeldoorn is Assistant Professor of Philosophy and a member of the Centre for Political Philosophy at Leiden University, the Netherlands. He has held visiting appointments at the University of Toronto, the University of Montreal, King's College London, and the University of Leuven. His research has appeared in journals including Archiv fur Geschichte der Philosophie, History of European Ideas, and Hobbes Studies.
Robin Douglass is Senior Lecturer in Political Theory in the Department of Political Economy, King's College London. Before arriving at King's, he studied at the Universities of York and Exeter. His research focuses on seventeenth- and eighteenth- century political philosophy. He is the author of Rousseau and Hobbes: Nature, Free Will, and the Passions (2015) and has recently published articles in journals including the American Journal of Political Science, History of Political Thought, European Journal of Political Theory, and The Review of Politics.
Introduction, Laurens van Apeldoorn and Robin Douglass 1. The Theocratic Leviathan: Hobbes's Arguments for the Identity of Church and State, Johan Olsthoorn 2. Natural Sovereignty and Omnipotence in Hobbes's Leviathan, A. P. Martinich 3. First Impressions: Hobbes on Religion, Education, and the Metaphor of Imprinting, Teresa M. Bejan 4. Tolerance as a Dimension of Hobbes's Absolutism, Franck Lessay 5. Hobbes on the Motives of Martyrs, Alexandra Chadwick 6. Hobbes, Calvinism, and Determinism, Alan Cromartie 7. Mosaic Leviathan: Religion and Rhetoric in Hobbes's Political Thought, Alison McQueen 8. Devil in the Details: Hobbes's Use and Abuse of Scripture, Paul B. Davis 9. The Politics of Hobbes's Historia Ecclesiastica, Patricia Springborg 10. A Profile in Cowardice? Hobbes, Personation, and the Trinity, Glen Newey 11. Hobbes and the Future of Religion, Jon Parkin 12. Hobbes and Early English Deism, Elad Carmel 13. All the Wars of Christendom: Hobbes's Account of Religious Conflict, Jeffrey Collins 14. Religious Conflict and Moral Consensus: Hobbes, Rawls, and Two Types of Moral Justification, Daniel Eggers 15. Hobbes on the Duty Not to Act on Conscience, S. A. Lloyd
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