Hobbes’ State of Nature: Human Behavior and the Case for Absolute Sovereignty Introduction Thomas Hobbes, writing during the turbulence of the English Civil War, developed a radical and systematic theory of political authority rooted in his conception of human nature and the anarchic condition he termed the "state of nature." His seminal work, Leviathan (1651), … Continue reading How does Thomas Hobbes’ conception of the state of nature inform his understanding of human behavior, and in what ways does it justify the necessity of an absolute sovereign for the establishment of social order and political authority?