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  1. May 5, 2023 · But Hume was a cagey writer, and certainly wrote to persuade the ruling class. What is so notable about “Of the Balance of Power,” however, is how it concludes. Hume says that Britain has prosecuted war to “excess,” calls for “moderation,” and gives his reasons.

  2. Aug 23, 2022 · David Hume (b. 1711–d. 1776) was one of the central figures of what we now commonly call the Scottish Enlightenment. He lived and wrote during a time when questions about Scotland’s political future and its place both in Britain and in the world figured prominently.

  3. Hume sees all governments as the result of a struggle between authority and liberty, with the best of them achieving a balance between the two by implementing systems of “general laws.”. Hume’s cautious approach to social change may fairly be called conservative.

  4. Close scrutiny of Hume's views on the nation, international. society, war, balance of power, empire and trade reveals the need to reassess his place within. international political theory. Taking an English School perspective, the analysis also shows.

  5. Aug 1, 2007 · In a vocabulary of the first half of the eighteenth century, David Hume presents a theory of politics and government that still roughly fits with the intellectual developments of the late twentieth and the current century.

  6. Abstract. Both champions and critics of “neorealism” in contemporary international relations misinterpret David Hume as an early spokesman for a universal and scientific balance-of-power theory. This article instead treats Hume’s “Of the Balance of Power,” alongside the other essays in his Political Discourses (1752), as conceptual ...

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  8. David Hume has two important insights into the origin of government; that it is often born out of warfare, and that once established there is a “perpetual struggle” within it between Liberty and Power (1777):

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