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why government? b. venn diagram. put the number of the word in the righ…

Question

why government?
b. venn diagram. put the number of the word in the right category.

  1. natural rights
  2. life
  3. liberty
  4. property
  5. government
  6. no laws
  7. laws
  8. compromises are made
  9. you are on your own
  10. rights are protected.

venn diagram with two overlapping ovals: left labeled \state of nature\, right labeled \social contract\
c. whats the connection? describe how the words listed are connected to one another.

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

First, categorize each item based on social contract theory:

  1. State of Nature only: This is the pre-government condition with no formal rules, where people have natural rights but no protection.
  2. Social Contract only: This is the system created to escape the state of nature, with formal laws and structured protection.
  3. Overlap: Natural rights are the foundation that the social contract is designed to safeguard, so they exist in both contexts.

For part C: The concepts connect because the flaws of the state of nature (no laws, insecure rights) lead people to form a social contract (create government, laws) to protect the natural rights (life, liberty, property) they already hold in the state of nature.

Answer:

B. Venn Diagram Placement:

State of Nature (only):
  1. No laws, 9. You are on your own!
Overlap (both):
  1. Natural Rights, 2. Life, 3. Liberty, 4. Property, 7. Laws
Social Contract (only):
  1. Government, 8. Compromises are made, 10. Rights are protected

C. Connection Explanation:

The state of nature is a pre-government state where people hold inherent natural rights (life, liberty, property) but lack formal laws or protection, leaving individuals vulnerable. To address this insecurity, people agree to a social contract: they form a government, accept laws and compromises, in exchange for the government protecting their core natural rights. The social contract is a direct response to the limitations of the state of nature, centered on preserving the natural rights that exist in both contexts.