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  • Cited by 17
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
February 2020
Print publication year:
2020
Online ISBN:
9781108778879
Series:
Ideas in Context (127)

Book description

Thomas Hobbes and John Locke sit together in the canon of political thought but are rarely treated in common historical accounts. This book narrates their intertwined careers during the Restoration period, when the two men found themselves in close proximity and entangled in many of the same political conflicts. Bringing new source material to bear, In the Shadow of Leviathan establishes the influence of Hobbesian thought over Locke, particularly in relation to the preeminent question of religious toleration. Excavating Hobbes's now forgotten case for a prudent, politique toleration gifted by sovereign power, Jeffrey R. Collins argues that modern, liberal thinking about toleration was transformed by Locke's gradual emancipation from this Hobbesian mode of thought. This book investigates those landmark events - the civil war, Restoration, the popish plot, the Revolution of 1688 - which eventually forced Locke to confront the limits of politique toleration, and to devise an account of religious freedom as an inalienable right.

Awards

Winner, 2021 Morris D. Forkosch Prize, American Historical Association

Reviews

‘This is a major scholarly contribution, and among many important contributions of this extremely valuable new book by one of the most important interpreters of Hobbes, and now also of Locke.’

John Marshall Source: Hobbes Studies

‘In the Shadow of Leviathan is a worthy sequel to Jeffrey Collins’s outstanding 2005 book, The Allegiance of Thomas Hobbes … Among the many virtues of Collins’s book, the most impressive is his meticulous examination of the historical context in which the shift in Locke’s thinking occurred. In a time in which many academic books are written too hastily, it is satisfying to read a work that is clearly the product of many years of painstaking research. Political theorists, in particular, will find that they have much to learn - as this one did - from Collins’s thorough examination of the debates and political dynamics of the Interregnum and especially the Restoration.’

Devin Stauffer Source: The Review of Politics

‘A definitive and transformative study.’

E. J. Eisenach Source: Choice

‘… Collins’s consistently brilliant reading of Hobbes and Locke through the lens of 'the Restoration toleration wars' provides a vital reminder of the inadequacy of toleration, in and of itself, as the interpretive key to the ecclesiastical politics of the era.’

Brent S. Sirota Source: Journal of British Studies

‘… In the Shadow of Leviathan is an important work of scholarship from which no one can fail to learn a great deal. It is to be hoped that it will stimulate other scholars to rescue the relationship between Locke and Hobbes from a period of anomalous and wholly undeserved neglect.’

Nicholas Jolley Source: Journal of the History of Philosophy

‘Jeffrey Collins has written a hulk of a book, one carrying not an ounce of fat. Erudite and forensic, it is a challenging read. But it is also a book that shows what intellectual history at its very best can do …’

Robert G. Ingram Source: The Journal of Ecclesiastical History

‘… Jeffrey R. Collins’s magnificent study In the Shadow of Leviathan: John Locke and the Politics of Conscience invites us to set aside these familiar configurations in a favor of a more nuanced set of intellectual and political affiliations and disaffiliations …’

Brent S. Sirota Source: Journal of British Studies

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