A. Hobbes
B. Machiavelli
C. Hegel
D. Rousseau
E. T.H. Green
Related Mcqs:
- Who said that “Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains”?
A. Aristotle
B. Marx
C. Rousseau
D. Locke - Who said that from liberty is meant, “Every man is free to do what he wills, provided he infringes not the freedom of other man?”
A. Laski
B. G.D.H. Cole
C. Herbert Spencer
D. Liber
E. J.S.Mill - Where is written that men are born equal and always continue to be free and equal in respect of their rights?
A. Charter of League Nations
B. Charter of U.N.O.
C. Slogan of Glorious Revolution
D. Slogan of French Revolution
E. Declaration of Rights of Man (1789) - Who of the following said that in the state of nature man was nasty and brutish?
A. Hegel
B. Green
C. Hobbes
D. Bodin - Who of the following said that ‘rights are those conditions of social life without which no man can seek in general to be himself at his best’?
A. Laski
B. Marx
C. Spencer
D. Rousseau
E. Montesquieu - Who said: “a man who lives outside the polis is either a beast or a God”?
A. Aristotle
B. Bodin
C. Plato
D. Hobbes - Who said that man’s life in the state of nature was ‘solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short’?
A. Hobbes
B. Locke
C. Rousseau
D. Karl Marx - “You may be sure that France will rise free, united and independent, to stand on guard with others over the generous tolerances and brightening opportunities of the human society we mean to rescue and rebuild”. Who said this on 31 st August 1943?
A. Winston Churchill
B. Marechal Leclerc
C. General Charles de Gaulle
D. King George VI - Who said ‘Man is a social animal’?
A. Aristotle
B. Plato
C. Rousseau
D. Laski - With whom is the statement that: “The man who after enclosing a piece of land said, ‘this is mine’ was the founder of society” associated?
A. Green
B. Rousseau
C. Machiavelli
D. Proudhan
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