ABSTRACT

Robert Filmer's prime assumption is that the Bible contains the entire truth about the nature of the world and the nature of society. Along with details of recorded history from the beginning to the death of the Apostles, the Bible also includes the laws that would govern history from that time to the end of the world. This central assumption was shared by nearly every member of Tory Christendom in England in the seventeenth century. In the same way, Filmer holds that it is impossible for a people to escape political anarchy once it is assumed that all individuals are independent and equal. It is also impossible for people to escape from collectivism, if it is granted that everyone has a moral right to an equal share of the gifts of nature. In explaining why Filmer remains both important and influential, Laslett argues that his reputation owes a great deal to the fortuitous circumstances of the time at which his works were resuscitated. His work passed almost unnoticed when it was first issued. Only the position of the Tory party gave his views prominence. The value of Patriarcha as a historical document consists primarily in its revelation of the strength and persistence in European culture of the patriarchal attitude to political problems. The opening essay by Laslett offers a brilliant analysis of late seventeenth-century English politics and philosophy. Long unavailable, this is a masterpiece of religious conservatism that still registers in debates at present.

chapter |48 pages

Introduction

part |78 pages

Patriarcha and other Political Works of Sir Robert Filmer

chapter |74 pages

Patriarcha

A Defence Of The Natural Power of Kings Against The Unnatural Liberty Of The People

part |58 pages

The Freeholder’s Grand Inquest Touching

part |52 pages

Observations Upon

chapter |6 pages

The Preface

chapter |38 pages

Touching Forms Of Government

part |38 pages

Observations Concerning The Origin All Of Government,

chapter |2 pages

The Preface

chapter |10 pages

Observations On Mr. Hobbes’s Leviathan

Or His Artificial Man-A Commonwealth

chapter |11 pages

Observations On Mr. Milton Against Salmasius

Or His Artificial Man-A Commonwealth

part |40 pages

The Anarchy Of A Limited Or Mixed Monarchy Or

chapter |2 pages

The Preface

part |12 pages

The Necessity Of The Absolute Power of all Kings

chapter |10 pages

The Power Of Kings