In about 3 – 5 sentences answer the following
Hobbes on the state of nature
Hobbes on the purpose and method of the social contract
Hobbes on sovereignty and the characteristics of post-contractual government
Locke on the state of nature, natural law, and natural rights
Locke on the origins of private property
Locke on the point of the social contract
Locke on the powers of government and the right to revolution
Rousseau on the state of nature and on primitive man
Rousseau on the corrupting powers of civilization (Amour propre vs. Amour de soi)
Rousseau on the purpose of the contract, and the method of the contractual act
Rousseau on governance, the general will, and freedom
freedom from coercion versus freedom as self-determination (negative and positive freedom)
Burke on abstract styles of political theory
Burke on the origin of rights, and the proper approach to political theory
Burke on the complexity and depth of political society
Oakeshott on the abuses of rationalism in political theory
Oakeshott on proper political thought and action being like a cooking recipe