A. Right to life, liberty and property	
B. Right to religion, worship and conscience
C. Right to participate in affair of government
D. People enjoyed no rights all all
Origin Of State
According to Locke people in the state of nature enjoyed only:___________?
A. Divine rights
B. Natural rights
C. Legal rights
D. Religious rights
The state of nature, according to Locke, was: _____________?
A. A period of lawlessness
B. A period of peace and reason
C. A period of constant warfare
D. A period of peace in certain areas and war in other areas
Locke propounded his theory of Social Contract in the book entitled:
A. Lectures on Jurisprudence
B. Two Treatises on Civil Government
C. Social Contract
D. Representative Government
Locke advocated his theory in:_____________?
A. The sixteenth century
B. The seventeenth century
C. Twelfth century
D. The eighteenth century
John Locke, a proponent of Social Contract theory, hailed from:
A. France
B. Germany
C. Britain	
D. U.S.A.
According to Hobbes the sovereign was:__________?
A. A part to the contract
B. The result of the contract
C. Elected after the conclusion of the contract
D. Accountable to the people
Which one of the following statements sums up Hobbes’s views about the nature of man:
A. Man is a social animal
B. Man is co-operative sympathetic towards members of society
C. Man is essentially peace loving
D. Man is selfish and quarrelsome
Hobbes gives right to the individual:
A. To disobey the sovereign under certain conditions
B. Not to disobey the sovereign under any condition
C. To disobey the sovereign only if he acts against national interest
D. To disobey the sovereign if he fails to act in accordance with the terms of the contract
After the creation of state, according to Hobbes, people continued to enjoy:
A. Certain natural rights
B. Those rights which were granted to them by the sovereign
C. Those rights which they had retained at the time of the conclusion of the contract
D. Only those rights which were specified in the contract