Limiting Leviathan:
Hobbes on Law and International Affairs
by Larry
May (Author)
Thomas Hobbes wrote extensively about law and was
strongly influenced by developments and debates among lawyers of his day. And
Hobbes is considered by many commentators to be one of the first legal
positivists. Yet there is no book in English that focuses on Hobbes's legal
philosophy. Indeed, Hobbes's own book length treatment of law, A Dialogue
Between a Philosopher and a Student of the Common Laws of England, has also not
received much commentary over the centuries. Larry May seeks to fill the gap in
the literature by addressing Hobbes's legal philosophy directly, and comparing
Leviathan to the Dialogue, as he offers a new interpretation of Hobbes's views
about the connections among law, politics, and morality.
May argues that Hobbes is much more amenable to moral,
and even legal, limits on the law--indeed closer to Lon Fuller than to today's
legal positivists--than he is often portrayed. He shows that Hobbes's views can
provide a solid grounding for the rules of war and international relations
generally, contrary to the near universal belief that Hobbes is the bete noir
of international law. To support these views, May holds that Hobbes places
greater weight on equity than on justice, and that understanding the role of
equity is the key to his legal philosophy. Equity also is the moral concept
that provides restrictions on what a sovereign can legitimately do, and if
violated is the kind of limitation on sovereignty that could open the door for
possible international institutions.