Hobbesian Contractarianism
Hobbesian contractarianism grounds morality in the mutually advantageous agreements that rational, self-interested agents would make to escape the destructive conflict of a state of nature.
Definition
Hobbesian contractarianism holds that moral constraints are the principles it would be rational for self-interested agents to agree to and comply with, because mutual acceptance of such constraints makes everyone better off than they would be under unconstrained pursuit of self-interest.
Scope
This topic covers the contractarian tradition that derives moral and political constraints from rational self-interest: Hobbes's account of the state of nature and the covenant, Gauthier's rational-choice reconstruction of morality as constrained maximization, and the central problems of compliance and the moral standing of those unable to contribute. It contrasts this self-interest-based approach with the moral-impartiality basis of contractualism.
Core questions
- Can morality be derived entirely from rational self-interest?
- Why is it rational to comply with an agreed constraint when defection would pay?
- What is the moral standing of those who cannot benefit or threaten the contractors?
- How does the state of nature establish the baseline for fair agreement?
Key theories
- The covenant out of the state of nature
- Hobbes's argument that rational agents in a state of nature, where life is a war of all against all, would covenant to authorize a sovereign and accept moral constraints for the sake of peace and self-preservation.
- Constrained maximization
- Gauthier's thesis that a disposition to comply with mutually advantageous agreements, rather than to maximize utility act by act, is itself the rational disposition for self-interested agents to adopt.
History
Hobbes (1651) gave the foundational statement, deriving political and moral obligation from the rational self-interest of agents seeking to escape the state of nature. Gauthier (1986) reconstructed this project with the tools of rational-choice theory, arguing that constrained maximization is rational, and contemporary contractarians continue to debate compliance and the scope of the moral community.
Debates
- The compliance problem and the Foole
- Hobbes's Foole and the prisoner's dilemma raise the worry that it is rational to agree to constraints but then defect; Gauthier's reply via constrained maximization is widely contested.
- The exclusion of the vulnerable
- Because the contract rests on mutual advantage, those unable to benefit or harm the contractors, such as severely disabled people, non-human animals, and future generations, appear to fall outside morality's protection.
Key figures
- Thomas Hobbes
- David Gauthier
- Jan Narveson
- Gilbert Harman
Related topics
Seminal works
- hobbes1651
- gauthier1986
Frequently asked questions
- How does contractarianism differ from contractualism?
- Contractarianism grounds morality in the agreements rational self-interested agents would make for mutual advantage, while contractualism grounds it in principles no one could reasonably reject, appealing to a moral concern to justify oneself to others rather than to self-interest.
- What is the compliance problem?
- It is the difficulty of explaining why a rational self-interested agent should keep an agreement when breaking it would be more advantageous; Gauthier answers that adopting a stable disposition to comply is itself rational.