A. Hobbes
B. Locke
C. Rousseau
D. Marx
Related Mcqs:
- 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 - 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 said that bureaucracy is “a system of government, the control of which is so completely in the hands of the officials that their power jeopardizes the liberties of the ordinary citizens?”
A. Laski
B. Barker
C. Green
D. Liner - 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 - 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 - Who, said that ‘state is power and it is sin for the state to be weak?
A. Jenks
B. Herbert Spencer
C. Leacock
D. Triestchki - Who said about the origin of the state that ‘will’ not ‘force’ is the basis of the state?
A. Bentham
B. J.S.Mill
C. James Mill
D. T.H.Green
E. Grotius - Who said: “good citizens make a good state and bad citizens make a bad state”?
A. Kant
B. Aristotle
C. Marx
D. None of these - Which one of the following condition was not associated with the state of nature as expounded by Locke?
A. The state of nature was a state of peace, mutual assistance and cooperation
B. There were natural rights of life, liberty and property
C. The prevalence of natural law
D. There was continuous fear and danger of violent death - Who said “He who is of a calm and happy nature willhardly feel the pressure of age, but to him who is of an opposite disposition youth and age are equally a burden:”
A. Eratosthenes
B. Plato
C. Diophantus
D. Eppipides