Lectures on the Principles of Political Obligation / Reprinted from Green's Philosophical Works, vol. II., with Preface by Bernard Bosanquet
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About This Book
The lectures examine the moral foundations of political obligation by relating individual will and reason to the structures of civil society, arguing that duties to the state derive from the same self‑realising impulse that generates moral freedom. They clarify competing senses of freedom in philosophical traditions, analyze how laws, rules, and public opinion form moral sentiments, and judge civil institutions by their capacity to cultivate autonomy. Rejecting a literal state of nature, the lectures define natural rights as those that ought to be enforceable and explore how social organisation reconciles personal motives with collective moral aims.
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