[27] Leviathan, ch. ii; Morley’s ed. p. 19; chs. xiv, xv, pp. 66, 71, 72, 78; ch. xxix, pp. 148, 149. [↑]
[28] Leviathan, chs. xv, xvii, xviii. Morley’s ed. pp. 72, 82, 83, 85. [↑]
[29] “For two generations the effort to construct morality on a philosophical basis takes more or less the form of answers to Hobbes” (Sidgwick, Outlines of the History of Ethics, 3rd ed. p. 169). [↑]
[30] As when he presents the law of Nature as “dictating peace, for a means of the conservation of men in multitudes” (Leviathan, ch. xv. Morley’s ed. p. 77). [↑]
[31] See the headings, Council, Religion, etc. [↑]
[32] G. W. Johnson, Memoirs of John Selden, 1835, pp. 348, 362. [↑]
[33] G. W. Johnson, p. 264. [↑]
[35] G. W. Johnson, pp. 258, 302. [↑]
[36] Id. p. 302. Cp. in the Table Talk, art. Trinity, his view of the Roundheads. [↑]