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  1.  27
    The puzzle of the sovereign’s smile and the inner complexity of Hobbes’s theory of authorisation.Eva Helene Odzuck - 2024 - History of European Ideas 50 (5):717-732.
    Hobbes’s theory of authorisation poses numerous puzzles to scholars. The weightiest of these conundrums is a supposed contradiction between chapter 17 of Leviathan, that calls for unconditional submission to the sovereign, and chapter 21, that defends the liberties of the subject. This article offers a fresh perspective on the theory’s consistency, function and addressees. While existing research doubts the theory’s consistency, focuses on its immunisation function and on the subjects as the theory’s main addresses, the paper argues that Hobbes’s theory (...)
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  2.  28
    I Professed to Write Not All to All.Eva Helene Odzuck - 2017 - Hobbes Studies 30 (2):123-155.
    _ Source: _Volume 30, Issue 2, pp 123 - 155 While there are old questions in research on Hobbes regarding which audience he addressed in each of his different works – e.g. there are speculations that _De Cive_ is addressed to scientists and _Leviathan_ to the English people – another question has rarely been discussed and only recently reconsidered: Might Hobbes have addressed different audiences also _within_ one and the same text, and if so, might he have intended to communicate (...)
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    Thomas Hobbes' körperbasierter Liberalismus: eine kritische Analyse des Leviathan.Eva Helene Odzuck - 2016 - Berlin: Duncker Und Humblot.