Thomas Hobbes, whose current reputation at the time was resting largely on his political and wide-ranging interests, was an intriguing and brilliant philosophical thinker. In philosophy, physics, history, and mathematics, Hobbes was a serious and prominent participant in the intellectual life during the Age of Enlightenment. The Age of Enlightenment was one of the most significant cultural and intellectual spread of new ideas and beliefs across Europe, such as, the ideas of atheism, liberalism and neo-classicism that were catching wind through the invention of the printing press that made papers and books such as the Leviathan to be spread around much easier. In its time Leviathan was a truly influential gear in the events that would follow …show more content…
("Of Religion" in Hobbes Leviathan 869). Hobbes presents religion in a way that boosted the idea of a state power to rule over individuals, as he backed his stance on this view multiple times. Some people such as F.C Hood believed that Hobbes did not want to "contaminate his philosophy by mingling religion with It.", and also "Hobbes forced this supernatural obligation into this naturalist theory as a fictions natural obligation without an obligor." (The Divine Politics of Thomas Hobbes: An Interpretation of Leviathan). He was right on some points that Hobbes did not want religion in an absolute monarchy and held no place in that monarchy. He developed a very pessimistic view on certain prospects on religions ethics and progress, which he fled from France to live in England privately for the remainder of his life fearing that he made some people angry with Leviathan. Which they were of course as it arose their suspicions that he was an absolutist when he later moved back to