TABLE OF CONTENTS
TITLE…………………………………………………………………i
CERTIFICATION…………………………………………..………ii
DEDICATION……………………………………………………....iii
ACKNOWLEDGMENT……………………………………………iv
TABLE OF CONTENTS………………………………………..….vi
CHAPTER
ONE
1.0
General Introduction…………………………………….…….1
1.1 Statement of the Problem…………………………….……….2
1.2
Purpose of the Study…………………………………….……3
1.3
Scope of the Study……………………………………………4
1.4
Methodology………………………………………………….4
1.5
Literature review……………………………………………..5
CHAPTER
TWO
2.0
The Origin of Civil State…………………………………….11
2.1 The State of nature……………………………………..…...........11
2.2
The right to private property……………………………………..15
2.3
The social contact…………………………………………..........19
CHAPTER
THREE
3.0
The Lockean Civil State…………………………………..............24
3.1 The purpose of civil state…………………………………………24
3.2
The Separation of powers………………………………………...29
3.3
The Extent and limit of Representation…………………..............33
3.4
The dissolution of Government…………………………..............37
CHAPTER
FOUR
4.0
The relevance of Lockean civil state to Nigerian democracy…….40
4.1 The leadership question…………………………………………...42
4.2 Security……………………………………………………………46
4.3 Human rights and social justice …………………………………..49
4.4 Checks and Balances ……………………………………………..52
CHAPTER
FIVE
5.0
Evaluation and
conclusion………………………………………55
5.1 Evaluation……………………………………………………….55
5.2
Conclusion………………………………………………………59
BIBLIOGRAPHY…………………………………………………….61
CHAPTER ONE
1.0
BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
1.1 General Introduction
John Locke was born on August 29, 1632 in Warrington, Somerset. His father, John Locke senior, was a lawyer
and a small land owner. The family had a puritan and a parliamentary
background. He studied at the famous
Christ Church, Oxford. He studied sciences, especially medicine under Sir
Robert Boyle and was later admitted into the household of the Lord Aschey as
his physician and secretary. He later opened up a new chapter in his life and
became involved in political affairs of the day.
One of the
bases of his political thought was his teaching on the civil state which he
best called civil society. In order to
demonstrate what a civil society is, he traced its origin to the state of
nature from where men unite together to go into civil state. He stated that,
This
is done wherever any number of men, in the state of nature, enter into society
to make one people, one body politic, under one supreme government, or else
when anyone joins himself to, and incorporates with any government already
made….1
From the state of nature, people enter into civil state through consent,
to surrender their right of enforcing the law of nature to the society for them
to setup a lawful form of government they thought fit2.
Democracy being a system of government under which the people exercise
the governing power either directly or through representatives duly elected by
them3, is taken to be one of the forms of government which people in the
civil state may choose to set up. There is need therefore, to explore the
ideals of the civil state by John Locke, and to bring out its relevance to the
practice of democracy in the Nigerian setup.
1.2 Statement of the Problem
In the light of the above explication, it is good to ask the basic
question:
what are the problems of Nigerian democracy? Some of the problems are: the failure of
leadership, inadequate checks and balances of the arms of government, lack of
security of life and property, and violation of human rights. These problems
among others make Nigerian democracy to be in shambles. Every Nigerian is in one way or the other
affected by this difficult situation facing the Nigerian State, and it is every
one’s duty to make maximum effort towards solving these problems for the
actualization of the ideals of democracy in Nigeria. Therefore, the ugly
situation of Nigeria democracy is the problem that motivates the research.
1.3. Purpose of the Study
Following the afore-mentioned problems, the aim of the study is to first
of all explore John Locke’s teaching on the elements of the civil state, and to
demonstrate the necessity of this teaching in solving the problems facing
Nigerian democracy. In other words, this
work seeks for the relevance of John Locke’s notion on civil State, to the
practice of democracy in Nigeria.
1.3. Scope of the Study
Taking cognizance of Locke’s vast
contribution and discussion in philosophy, this study is limited to his
teaching on the civil state, and its importance to the remedy of some of the
posing problems of democracy in the Nigerian State.
1.4. Methodology
The method of the work is expository and evaluative. This means that Locke’s Civil State is
explored and it is evaluated by showing its relevance to Nigerian democracy.
For proper comprehension, the work is divided into five chapters.
Chapter one serves as the background which explicates the introduction, the
statement of the problem, the aim, the scope, the method as well as the
literature review. Chapter two treats
the origin of John Locke’s civil state, which is traced back to the state of
nature. Also Locke’s view of right to
private property is stated in this chapter.
In chapter three, Locke’s civil state is exposed properly, with its
basic features like the purpose of the civil state, the separation of powers of
government, the extent and limit of representation, and the dissolution of
government. In chapter four, how the
ideals in the Lockean Civil State can be of good help in tackling some of the
problems facing Nigerian democracy, is duly considered. Finally, chapter five
deals with general evaluation and conclusion.
1.5. Literature Review
In order to properly
explain Locke’s notion of civil state, there is need to explicate the views
some other thinkers have about the civil state.
A. Appadorai quoting R. Maclver in his book The substance of Politics stated that:
The state is an association which, acting
through law as promulgated by a government endowed to this end with coercive
power, maintains within a community territorially demarcated the universal
external conditions of social order[1].
He agreed with Herbert Spencer
that “the state is nothing but a natural institution for preventing one man
from infringing the rights of another; it is a joint-stock protection company
for mutual assurance5.
Following what is
said above, from the ancient period, many philosophers in their political
thought have in one way or the other viewed on the notion of civil state. Each of them is influenced by the political
affairs of his time, so they have related different views about the civil
state. Therefore, the views of various philosophers of different epochs are to
be reviewed.
Plato one of the
ancient philosophers, in his political thought held that the state originated
for the reflection of people’s economic needs.
This means that for him, as he is quoted by Stumpf in his book Philosophy: History and Problems, “a state comes into existence because no
individual is self sufficing, we all have many needs”6. The state exists for the service of
needs of men. In other words, “men are not independent of
one another,
but needs the aid
and co-operation of others in the production of necessaries of life”7.
He divided the citizens of the state into three classes, namely: the
guardians who are the rulers, the auxiliaries who are the soldiers of the
state, and the common people who provide the material needs of the state.
Aristotle also in
the ancient period stated that the state is natural to man. As he is quoted by Stumpf, “it is evident
that the state is a creature of nature and that man is by nature a political
animal”8.
This made him to state that “he who is unable to live in society, or who
has no need because he is sufficient for himself, must be either a beast or a
god”9.
The state for him exists for an end, and this end is the supreme good of
man. This means that, “the state comes
into existence for the bare end of life, but it continues in existence for the
sake of good life….”10
Thomas Aquinas in
the medieval era viewed the state as a natural society, which has at its
disposal the necessary means for attaining its end, which is the common good of
the people. For him “… the government of
the state is instituted to secure the necessary conditions of the common good”11.
This means that,
The state’s function is
to secure that common good by keeping the peace, organizing the activities of
the citizens in harmonious pursuit, providing for the resources to sustain
life, and preventing as far as possible, obstacles to the good of life”12.
Hooker a renaissance
period thinker whose teaching had much influence on John Locke, viewed the
emergence of the state as a natural inclination in man to live in society, and
this is only achieved by common agreement of the individuals involved. This according to Copleston means that “the
establishment of civil government thus rests upon consent, without which there
was no reason that one man should take upon him to lord or judge over another”13.
Furthermore, in the
modern era, Hobbes according to M. Sibley in his book, Political Ideas and Ideologies, viewed the emergence of the civil
state as,
When men contract with one another to leave the
state of nature, they then enter civil society where the equality of nature
gives way to subordination to the ruler14.
For Hobbes the
sovereign is not a party to the contract, he only accepts his power from the
contractors and he is absolutely free to act in any way he sees fit, subject
only to the primary law of nature that he preserves himself.
Rousseau, another
philosopher of modern period, viewed that in the civil state each person gives
up his natural liberty in order to gain civil liberty in common with others
under the supreme direction of the general will. Rousseau’s own view of the
civil state according to M. Sibley, is that, “a legitimate civil state… implies
that men have given up their natural freedom and have exchanged for it a
civilized freedom broader and more certain than that which they previously
enjoyed”15.
Finally, the
foregoing is the concise conceptions of philosophers on the civil state. With these in mind, it is proper to examine
John Locke’s exposition of this topic.
1 J. Locke, The Second Treatise
of Government, ed. T. Peardon (New York: Oxford Library of Arts Press, 1965),
P.50.
3 A. Appadorai, The substance
of politics (India: Oxford University Press, 1960), p. 137.
[1] R. Maclver quoted in A. Appadorai, Op. Cit., p. 50
5 Herbert Spencer quoted in A. Appadorai, p. 50.
6 Plato quoted in S. Stumpf, Philosophy: History and Problems (USA: McGraw Hill Inc, 1994), p. 70.
7 F. Copleston, A History of
Philosophy, vol. 1 (London: Continuum Books, 2003), p. 225.
8 Aristotle quoted in S. Stumpf, Op. Cit., p. 103.
10 F. Copleston, Vol. 1, op. cit, p. 351.
11 F.
Copleston, A History of Philosophy,
vol. 2 (London: Continuum Books, 2003), p. 415.
12 S. Stumpf Op. Cit., p. 193.
13 F. Copleston, A History of
Philosophy, vol. 3 (London: Continuum Books, 2003), p. 323.
14 M. Sibley, Political Ideas
and Ideologies (New York: Harper and Row Publishers, 1970), p. 351.