A. Only the right to life, liberty and property
B. No rights
C. Only economic rights
D. Unspecified natural rights
Related Mcqs:
- According to Locke people in the state of nature enjoyed only:___________?
A. Divine rights
B. Natural rights
C. Legal rights
D. Religious rights - According to Hobbes in the state of nature people: ___________?
A. Lived harmoniously
B. Quarrelled with each other
C. Had regard for judicial system
D. Respected each other’s rights - The important rights enjoyed by the people in the state of nature, says Locke were:
A. Right to life, liberty and property
B. Right to religion, worship and conscience
C. Right to participate in affair of government
D. People enjoyed no rights all all - The rights which are supposed to have been enjoyed by the people even in the state of nature are called:
A. Fundamental rights
B. Moral rights
C. Civil rights
D. Natural rights
E. Legal rights - According to Hobbes in the state of nature man was: __________?
A. Very law abiding
B. Nasty and brutish
C. Cultured and mannered
D. Selfless and had fellow feelings - According to Hobbes state of nature was: __________?
A. Pre-social
B. Post-social
C. Socially respectable
D. None of the above - According to Hobbes the state of Nature was a period of:___________?
A. Peace and plenty
B. Constant warfare
C. Peace and scarcity
D. Religious dominance - The two important factors, which according to Rousseau compelled the people to leave the state of nature and create the state were:
A. Growth of population and property
B. Emergence of strong religious and military classes
C. Fear of foreign danger and need of a strong ruler to protect them
D. Growth of property and fear of revolution - After the creation of state, according to Hobbes, people continued to enjoy:
A. Certain natural rights
B. Those rights which were granted to them by the sovereign
C. Those rights which they had retained at the time of the conclusion of the contract
D. Only those rights which were specified in the contract - Rousseau believed that man in the “state of nature” was naturally good. Still he admitted that a true state of nature probably existed except as an ideal, a standard for comparison. His mothod for dealing with this discrepancy between reality and theory was to:
A. “Lay the facts aside, as they do not affect the question.”
B. He blamed a maid and remained silent when she was punished
C. He immediately confessed
D. He ran awa but not before returning the stolen items