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    The sovereign power in a State has right over a subject o... — Carmelics
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    Supports→The burden of political stability falls on the sovereign rather than the subject.

    The sovereign power in a State has right over a subject only in proportion to the excess of its power over that of a subject.

    Rights & LibertySocial Contract
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    A strict naturalism about right and obligation implies that authority is grounde...The burden of political stability falls on the sovereign rather than the subject...

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    For Spinoza, sovereign right is conditioned on and limited by the coll...87%The sovereign lacks the right to fully control individuals' beliefs81%For Hobbes, sovereign legislative authority is nearly absolute and not...81%Spinoza's account of sovereign authority differs fundamentally from Ho...80%

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    By adhering to a strict naturalism about right and obligation and maintaining that “the sovereign power in a State has right over a subject only in proportion to the excess of its power over that of a subject” (Epistle 50), Spinoza, unlike Hobbes, places the burden of political stability on the sovereign rather than the subject (see Wernham 1958, 27). The commonwealth must be structured so as to promote compliance; when there is excessive vice or non-compliance, the blame must be “laid at the do

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