As the work of Hobbes was so influential in this period, it is important to consider the relevance of his main theories to the drama in question. Hobbes was born in 1588 and experienced the vicissitudes of the Civil War, the Protectorate, and the Restoration. Because of the anarchy that he personally witnessed, he developed a philosophical doctrine which proposed that citizens should acquiesce to state authority in order to make a peaceful Commonwealth. Hobbes saw humans as physical objects, motivated by selfishness and greed.9 He was concerned with establishing peace, but at the same time he saw this combative streak in mankind as working against peace. He pointed out that people desire their own liberty yet at the same time desire to have dominion over others. If control is lost, the result will be war:
Hobbes advocated that men should draw up mutual covenants in order to establish a balance between individual freedom and the collective good:
After the turmoil of the Civil War, Hobbes’ Leviathan was seen as a crucial work, and its astute political analysis of life as “nasty, brutish and short” was borne out by the bloody events of the Civil War.