IMHO Hobbes isn't much of a conservative, or at least how I would define conservativism.
IMHO again, it's more or less futile to bring modern political labels back on philosophers/political thinkers. Locke was liberal in a sense because he wanted broader acceptance of various people, but he, a whig, was arguing against Filmer, a Tory. Whigs wanted more power in parliament and no divine representative status for the king. Tories wanted the opposite, and neither had any ideas that could really be called liberal.
That said, I think it's an excellent question, and as for its answer, I'll cheap out and say that either party could hold idealists or realists, but that probably there are more realist conservatives. Then again, many libertarians are die-hard crazy idealists and i'm a realist libertarian
Post script: a government can't be socialist unless it's created by a proletarian revolution.
IMHO again, it's more or less futile to bring modern political labels back on philosophers/political thinkers. Locke was liberal in a sense because he wanted broader acceptance of various people, but he, a whig, was arguing against Filmer, a Tory. Whigs wanted more power in parliament and no divine representative status for the king. Tories wanted the opposite, and neither had any ideas that could really be called liberal.
That said, I think it's an excellent question, and as for its answer, I'll cheap out and say that either party could hold idealists or realists, but that probably there are more realist conservatives. Then again, many libertarians are die-hard crazy idealists and i'm a realist libertarian
Post script: a government can't be socialist unless it's created by a proletarian revolution.
