On a Hobbesian Defense of the Minimal State

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On a Hobbesian Defense of the Minimal State
Wündisch, Joachim

From the journal ARSP Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie, Volume 107, March 2021, issue 1

Published by Franz Steiner Verlag

article, 8661 Words
Original language: English
ARSP 2021, pp 128-144
https://doi.org/10.25162/arsp-2021-0008

Abstract

Michael Levin challenges the methodological soundness of Robert Nozick’s argument for the minimal state, but supports his final result: The exclusive aims of the state must be the “protection against force, theft, fraud, [and the] enforcement of contracts”. To replace Nozick’s, Levin builds a Hobbesian defense of the minimal state. He claims that the hypothetical rational choice of the less extensive bargain by the individuals in the state of nature morally justifies a minimal, but no other state. I analyze and seek to improve upon this Hobbesian defense of the minimal state. While Levin’s arguments can support the claim that any justified state has to be at least as extensive as the ultraminimal state, they also provide ground, contrary to his intention, upon which to build more extensive states.

Author information

Joachim Wündisch