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ikB~;Øe  SYLLABUS

                                                  ik'pkR; jktuhfr fopkj

                                         (WESTERN POLITICAL THOUGHT)


            mís';%  1- rkRdkfyd jktuhfrd ?kVukvksa] leL;kvksa vkSj muosQ fu/kZfjr lek/ku osQ fy, ¶IysVks ls jkmYl¸ rd osQ ikjEifjd 'kkL=kh;
                      fl¼karksa dh O;k[;k vkSj fo'ys"k.k dk vè;;u bl isij osQ ekè;e ls djokukA
                   2- bl isij dk eq[; mís'; gS fd fofHkUu jktuhfrd nk'kZfudksa ,oa fopkjdksa osQ fopkjksa dk rqyukRed vè;;u djokukA

                   3- ik'pkR; jktuhfrd ijEijk dh lrr~rk vkSj ifjorZu osQ lanHkZ esa fopkjdksa dh iSr`drk osQ n`f‘dks.k dks izLrqr djukA
            Objectives:
                   1.  This paper studies the classical tradition in political theory from Plato to Rawls with the view to understand how
                       the great Masters explained and analyzed political events and problems of their time and prescribed solutions.
                   2.  The paper aims at the comparison of the ideas of different Political philosophers and theorists.
                   3.  The legacy of the thinkers is explained with a view to establish the continuity and change within the Western
                       Political Tradition.




               Øe
              la[;k                                         fo"k; (Topics)
              Sr. No.


               1.    IysVks (Plato)


               2.    vjLrw  (Aristotle)

               3.    fudksyks eSfd;kosyhs (Niccolo Machiavelli)


               4.    FkkWel gkWCl (Thomas Hobbes)

               5.    tkWu ykWd (John Locke)


               6.    thu tSDl :lks (Jean Jacques Rousseau)


               7.    tsjseh csUFke (Jeremy Bentham)

               8.    tkWtZ foYgsYe izSQMfjd ghxy (George Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel)


               9.    dkyZ ekDlZ (Karl Marx)

              10.    tkWu LVqvVZ fey (John Stuart Mill)
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