What factors in Hobbes’ philosophical system — particularly his mechanistic view of human nature — led him to define happiness as a restless pursuit of desires? Compare Hobbes’ understanding of human desire with Aristotle’s teleological notion of eudaimonia and John Stuart Mill’s utilitarian conception of happiness.

Hobbes’ Mechanistic Conception of Human Nature and the Restless Pursuit of Desire: A Comparative Study with Aristotle and J.S. Mill Introduction Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679) represents a decisive turn in the history of political and moral philosophy, introducing a mechanistic and materialist anthropology that broke with classical and scholastic teleology. In Leviathan (1651), Hobbes redefined happiness … Continue reading What factors in Hobbes’ philosophical system — particularly his mechanistic view of human nature — led him to define happiness as a restless pursuit of desires? Compare Hobbes’ understanding of human desire with Aristotle’s teleological notion of eudaimonia and John Stuart Mill’s utilitarian conception of happiness.