A. Hobbes
B. Laski
C. Aristotle
D. Rousseau
Related Mcqs:
- 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 - “Really I think that the poorest he that is in England bath a life, as the greatest he, and therefore truly, sir, I think it is clear that every man that is to live under a government ought first by his own consent to put himself under the government, and I do think that the poorest ram in England is not at all bound in a strict sense to the Government that he bath not had a voice to put himself under”. The statement argues for
A. Rule according to the consent of the governed
B. Rule of the poor
C. Expropriation of the rich
D. Distribution of wealth equally to all - Who said that outward conditions and rights are necessary to the national life?
A. Liber
B. Keruse
C. Edmund Burke
D. Cicero
E. Dr. Asirvatham - Who regarded ‘life, liberty and property’ as Inalienable rights of man:
A. Locke
B. Hobbes
C. Green
D. Aristotle - Who said. “A man readily forgives the nurder of his father than the confiscation of his property”.
A. Hobbes
B. Marx
C. Machiavelli
D. Aristotle - 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 - 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 - In order to determine the proper role of government in a society it is useful to distinguish between “the part of a person’s life which concerns only himself and that which concerns others” according to: _________?
A. J.S. Mill
B. Locke
C. Godwin
D. Bentham - Who said that the state comes into existence for the sake of life and continues for the sake of good life?
A. Aristotle
B. Plato
C. Cicero
D. Machiavelli - Who said that state came into being for the sake of life and continues for the sake of good life?
A. Plato
B. Aristotle
C. Spencer
D. Spinoza
E. Rousseau
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