April 28, 2010
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- | [[De Sade]], is said, follows [[Hobbes]] rather than [[Locke]]. Aggression comes from nature; it is what Nietzsche calls the "[[will-to-power]]". See [[innate goodness]] and [[state of nature]]. | + | [[De Sade]], is said, follows [[Hobbes]] rather than [[Locke]]. Aggression comes from nature; it is what Nietzsche calls the "[[will-to-power]]". See [[innate goodness]], [[innate cruelty]] and [[state of nature]]. |
- | [[Innatism]] | + | |
- | [[Negative liberty]] | + | |
- | [[Wildness]] | + | |
- | [[Universal reason]] | + | |
- | # [[History of liberalism]] (links) | + | |
- | # [[Anarchy]] (links) | + | |
{{GFDL}} | {{GFDL}} |
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De Sade, is said, follows Hobbes rather than Locke. Aggression comes from nature; it is what Nietzsche calls the "will-to-power". See innate goodness, innate cruelty and state of nature.
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