I believe you mean Leviathan, It was a biblical monster.
see the Old Testament Psalm 74
In modern Hebrew it means whale.
Thomas Hobbes Wrote the book Leviathon.
Leviathon, starring Peter Weller, Richard Crenna, Amanda Pays, and Daniel Stern was released in 1989.
The paperback of Scott Westerfeld's Leviathan is 464 pages and the hardcover is 448.
The sailor dreamed of being back on watch as the ship headed to where the legendary leviathan was said to dwell.
You get it after defeating the first boss before destroying the first leviathon seed on the first planet.
most people say godzilla but there wrong the leviathon would definitely win even though the godzilla could shoot a beam out of its mouth its bigger,faster, and has a stronger bite force. those people who think godzilla would win they are only cause there a fan. two stuff can beat godzilla and that's the kraken and the leviathon.
godzilla is the 2nd most powerful creature so I think it can take down a freakishly large shark? 3rd megladon,2nd godzilla,kraken/leviathon
Quotes by Thomas Hobbes can be found in his published works such as "Leviathan" and "The Elements of Law". They can also be found in collections of his writings or biographies about him. Many websites dedicated to quotes also feature selections from his work.
The name that comes to mind is john Locke. Jefferson, Madison and other founding fathers pointed to him most of all. I would point out that it was Rousseau who penned what some would consider the classic treatise on contract theory, liberal republicanism and defining the sovereign separate from the state. And surely Leviathon, a book by Thomas Hobbes, talking about the necessity of representative government and the equality of all men was certainly in Jefferson's library. But the easy answer is John Locke but certainly not the all inclusive answer.
I am not sure if there was any such philosopher to pose something so vague, but I believe Hobbes mentions something to the case in the Leviathon along the lines that it would be ridiculous to do such a thing because one has made a social contract and to overthrow him would be to overthrow onesself. One could mearly dissmiss your leader instead by breaking the contract (ie. leave the country, secede...). But this may only pertain to cetain political situations. If it is a question of whether or not one will have the physical capacity to do such a thing... I have never read anything of the sort...
you mean what you mean
It mean what you don't what does it mean.