Study questions
Study questions
Social and Political Philosophy II: PHIL 244
Lecturer: Sandy Berkovski
Bilkent University
Spring 2025
1 Introduction: St Paul
- What is the source of political authority?
- Can there be a legitimate disobedience of the (political) authority?
- Why should we obey the political authority?
- What is the main principle of Law?
2 Hobbes
- VI
- What are the two concepts of motion identified by Hobbes?
- What is the notion of endeavor?
- What is love?
- What is pleasure?
- What is the concept of good?
- What is the concept of will? How is it related to deliberation?
- What is happiness?
- X
- What is the concept of power?
- What are the manifestations of power?
- XI
- What is the governing factor of human behaviour, according to Hobbes?
- What do people obey others?
- Can people love virtue? Why? How?
- Why do people trust others?
- Why do people embrace traditions?
- What is the link between ignorance and social disturbances?
- XIII
- What is the meaning of equality in the state of nature?
- How does diffidence cause conflict in the state of nature?
- What are other sources of conflict?
- What is the definition of war?
- Why should war be avoided?
- What does Hobbes mean to prove by showing that we do not normally trust each other?
- Is there justice in the state of nature?
- What is the main reason for preferring peace over war?
- XIV
- What is the difference between the law of nature and the right of nature?
- Formulate the first law of nature. What is its justification?
- How does the second law of nature follow from the first law of nature?
- How is morality related to right of nature?
- What kind of rights can never be given up? What is the significance of this fact?
- What kind of a contract is covenant?
- Are there valid covenants in the state of nature? Why?
- Is there morality in the state of nature?
- XV
- Formulate the law of justice.
- Is it rational to be just?
- How does the distinction between injustice in manners and injustice in actions help to explain the obligations in foro interno and in foro externo?
- How does the distinction between commutative and distributive justice help to explain the difference between justice and equity?
- Formulate the law of gratitude. What is the difference between the duty of justice and the duty of gratitude?
- Formulate and explain the law of compleasance.
- What is the relation between morality and laws of nature?
- XVII
- What are the parties of the political covenant?
- How does the picture on the frontispiece help to illustrate the political covenant?
- XVIII
- Name and explain any two rights of the sovereign.
- Does Hobbes advocate political censorship?
- How does Hobbes justify obedience to the sovereign even when the sovereign is a tyrant?
- XXI
- What is the concept of freedom (liberty)?
- What kind of freedom can the subjects enjoy in a political society?
- Can the sovereign be unjust to his subjects? Discuss with reference to the David and Uriah story.
- Can the subjects legitimately disobey the sovereign?
- Do the subjects have the right to avoid military draft or desert the army?
- Do the subjects have the right to pursue a rebellion against the sovereign?
- What is the significance of the silence of the law?
- XXVI
- What is a civil law?
- What is the difference between counsel and command?
- Why is the sovereign not subject to civil laws?
- What is the relation between civil laws and laws of nature? Explain with the aid of an example.
- What does Hobbes mean when he says that unwritten laws are laws of nature?
- What is the significance of the claim that every law requires interpretation? What is the special difficulty in interpreting laws of nature?
- What is the fundamental law of the political society?
- XXVIII
- Isolate different elements in Hobbes' definition of punishment.
- What is the basis of legitimacy of the punishment inflicted on the citizens by the state?
- How is punishment different from revenge?
- How to determine the legitimate pain inflicted by punishment?
- Can death penalty be a legitimate form of punishment?
- XXIX
- Name and explain any two reasons of the collapse of the political society.
- XXX
- What is the "office" and the "obligation" of the sovereign? Does this contradict the claim that the sovereign has no obligations to the citizens?
- What is the ground of that office?
- Why should citizens be educated in legal and political philosophy?
- Can simple people be successfully educated in legal and political philosophy (or only the members of the intellectual elite)?
- What kind of facts should citizens learn in the course of their political education?
- Should the citizens' obedience be sincere?
- Why should the sovereign rule with equity?
- What is the difference between just laws and good laws?
3 Mill
- IV
- What are the two principal duties of people in a society? (73)
- Is Mill's view guilty of indifference to others? (74)
- Why should every person have authority in determining his conduct? (74)
- What kind of acts are the proper objects of punishment? (76)
- Are there duties to oneself, in addition to duties to others? (76-77)
- Formulate the argument that every part of one's conduct may properly be regulated by others. (78)
- How does Mill respond to this argument? (81)
- Should certain practices like pork consumption be disallowed on the grounds that they offend sensibilities of others? (83)
- Is taxation a just arrangement, according to Mill? (85-86)
- Should we be tolerant of polygamy? (89-90)
4 Hegel
- What is the notion of Spirit?
- What is the role of Spirit in history?
- What is the role of freedom in world history?
- What are subjective causes of human action?
- What is the point (justification) of misfortunes we observe in history?
- What is the relation between goals (passions) of individual people and the goal of world history?
- Who are the world-historical individuals?
- What is the Cunning of Reason?
- What is the source of people's dissatisfaction in political conditions?
- What is the role of God in historical development?
- What is the ethical life of the state?
5 Marx
- Explain the concept of the alienation of labour. Give a couple of examples.
- Why does Marx claim that man is only acting freely in fulfilling his animal instincts?
- In what sense is man alienated from his species?
- In what sense is man alienated from his fellow men?
- What is the origin of the division of labour?
- What are the contradictions created by the division of labour?
- How does the division of labour lead to alienation?
- What, historically, are the different forms of ownership?
- How is Marx's conception of history different from Hegel's?
- Why do communists propose abolition of private property?
- Why do communists propose abolition of traditional family?
- Why do communists propose abolition of national states?
6 Weber
- History, sociology, and the state (32-58)
- What is a common feature of political organizations?
- What are three different ways of legitimating political authority?
- What is a sense of political vocation?
- What are the two prerequisites for the continuing maintenance of political rule?
- What are the two different possible relations between the ruler and material resources?
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What is Weber's definition of the modern state?
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What is the class of `professional politicians'?
-
How is it distinct from the class of part-time politicians?
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What are the economic conditions for a person to live 'for politics'?
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How does a plutocrat live `from politics'? How is he different, in this regard, from a paid official?
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How does the presence of professional bureaucracy alter the political debate in a state?
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What are the emotional sanctions of modern bureaucracy?
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What is the role of the division of labour in the emergence of bureaucracy?
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How did the rulers gradually lose any specific expertise?
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What influence did the parliamentary system have on the change of government structures?
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What are the social origins of professional politicians that have emerged in the past?
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Why have the lawyers become prominent in the political life of a democratic society?
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What is the role of impartiality and responsibility in the political leader's activity?
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What is the significance of the class of journalists in the democratic society?
- How does Weber characterise the class of party officials?
- Ethics and politics (76-92)
- What are the three necessary qualities of a good politician?
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What are the two deadly sins of a politician?
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What is the point that the example of unfaithful husband is supposed to illustrate?
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What are the dangers of immersion in the past?
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What is the ethics of conviction?
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How is the ethics of conviction different from the ethics of responsibility?
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What are the possible parallels between the ethics of responsibility and utilitarianism?
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Why does Weber describe politics as a pact with the devil?
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Can the ethics of conviction and the ethics of responsibility be harmonised?
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Does Weber advocate Realpolitik as as a political ideology?
- Charismatic leadership (Economy and Society)
- According to Weber, what is charismatic leadership?
- Can political success be the basis of charismatic authority? from legal-rational authority, according to Weber?
- According to Weber, how does charismatic leadership arise?
- How does charismatic authority relate to social and political change, according to Weber?
- Weber argues that charismatic authority is not sustainable in the long term. What factors contribute to the decline of charismatic leadership?
- How does Weber explain the relationship between charisma and routinization?
- In Weber's theory, what is the role of followers in sustaining charismatic leadership?
- How does Weber's theory of charismatic leadership contribute to our understanding of the dynamics of power and authority in society?
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