Title: Social Contract Theory
1Social Contract Theory
- The ideas behind the Declaration of Independence
and the American Revolution
2Journal Prompt
- What would your life be like without government?
- Consider services the government provides
- freedoms government limits
- your safety, health, happiness and property
- Would you like to live without government? Why or
why not?
3Social Contract Theory is about
- 1. Why people theoretically choose to give up
some of their power in order to form a government - 2. The purpose of government
4Who are the main social contract theorists?
- Rousseau,Thomas Hobbes, John Locke wrote about
social contract theory in 1600s 1700s.
what does this have to do with US history?
5- John Lockes ideas are the foundation of the
Declaration of Independence
6The Second Treatise on Government by John Locke
- 124-page PERSUASIVE ESSAY.
- Why did he write it?
7Purpose of Lockes Second Treatise on Government
- To explain the role or purposes of govt
- Justify resisting the power of the king
- To protect property rights and increase Britains
wealth. (Locke was a big land owner)
farm
8Social Contract theorists like John Locke based
their ideas about government on a fictitious
state of nature
9What is this state of nature?
10What does the state of nature mean?
- What life is naturally like before people
created governments - Do we really know what this is? No. It is what
different philosophers imagine life would be like
without government. - What do you think the state of nature, or life
without government would be like?
11According to Locke, in the state of nature
everyone
- Is equal
- Has liberty
- Follows natural laws of reason -
- dont harm others LIFE/HEALTHor
- LIBERTY or
- PROPERTY POSSESSIONS
- Everyone has to preserve himself and others
- Has executive power- everybody has the right to
punish others for breaking these natural laws
12Natural laws of the state of nature dont mess
with someones
13The state of nature is dangerous!
- If everybody has the right to punish people who
break the natural laws then what is life like in
the state of nature?
Violent! Chaotic!
14Heres how Thomas Hobbes described life in the
state of nature, or life w/o government
- Life in the state of nature is essential a state
of constant violence, a state of war. It is...
short, nasty, and brutish
15If everyone has executive power to punish then
x
- People who are selfish or revengeful or unfair
will be extra lenient on their friends and hard
on people they dislike when punishing people who
break the natural laws
16Trade State of Nature for Govt
- State of nature can easily turn into a state of
war, in which nobodys life, liberty or property
is safe. So - Give up some liberties to leave the state of
nature and form a civil society, to form a
GOVERNMENT. - You give the GOVERNMENT your executive power to
punish people who mess with your life, liberty or
property.
17The purpose of government according to John Locke
is to
Liberty
Life
Property
Protect peoples natural rights
18Definition of Political Power
- right of making laws and penalties for the
regulating and preserving of property and of
employing the force power of the community to
enforce those laws and in the defense of the
common-wealth from foreign injury and all this
for the public good. - (Locke, 8)
19Forming a government to protect yourself from the
violence of the state of nature is called...
A social contract
20Right to revolution
According to John Locke, people have a right to
rebel or change the government when it no longer
protects their LIFE, LIBERTY PROPERTY. This
what the Founding Fathers used as the reason for
declaring independence from England.
21Right to revolution
governments are dissolved from within when
they fail to protect, life, liberty and property
contrary to their trust by this breach of trust
they forfeit the power the people had put into
their hands for quite contrary ends, and it the
power devolves goes back tothe people, who
have a right to provide for their own safety and
security, which is the end for which they are in
society.
22The goal of government is the good of
mankind.
Which is best for mankind,A) that the people
should be exposed to the boundless whim of
tyranny? B) that the rulers should
sometimes be opposed, then they grow exorbitant
in their use of power and employ it for the
destruction, and not the preservation of the
properties of their people? people have a right
to erect a new form of government as they
think good.
or
23Should people revolt immediately or over little
things?
Great mistakes in the ruling part, many wrong
and inconvenient laws, and all the slips of human
frailty, will be born by the people without
mutiny or murmur. But, if a long train of
abuses, prevarications lies and artifices make
the design visible to the people. It is not to
be wondered that they should then... endeavor to
put the rule into such hands which may secure
them the the ends for which government was at
first erected.
24Compare John Lockes ideas with the Declaration
of Independence
Signing the Declartion of Independence
25Natural Rights of men
Long train of abuses
Life
Property
Pursuit of Happiness
Liberty
Dissolve government