Theory in Practice: Quentin Skinner’s Hobbes, Reconsidered

Abstract

 

Quentin Skinner’s method for studying the history of political thought has been widely and heatedly debated for decades.  This article takes a new tack, offering a critique of Skinner’s approach on the grounds he has himself established: consideration of his historical work as exemplifying the theory in practice.  Three central assumptions of Skinner’s method are briefly reviewed; each is then evaluated in the context of his writings on Hobbes.  The analysis reveals problems and ambiguities in the specification and implementation of the method and in its underlying philosophy.  The essay concludes by examining the broader practical and philosophical implications of adopting this approach to the study of political ideas; the method operationalizes a set of philosophical commitments that transforms ideological choices into questions of proper method.