These two ideas have in common the authors that aboard them Hobbes and Locke, as well as the conception of a hypothetical case where there is no government, called the state of matter, and under the natural rights it is considered that these right are given to all humans, even in the absence of government. These two views differ in that natural rights is about rights to be granted to the people, while the state of nature is
These two ideas have in common the authors that aboard them Hobbes and Locke, as well as the conception of a hypothetical case where there is no government, called the state of matter, and under the natural rights it is considered that these right are given to all humans, even in the absence of government. These two views differ in that natural rights is about rights to be granted to the people, while the state of nature is