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Compare And Contrast On Liberty And Jean-Jacques Rousseau

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Both Jean-Jacques Rousseau and John Stuart Mill have ideas about the concept of freedom that differ greatly from both each other and their contemporaries. By comparing their works, ‘The Social Contract’ and ‘On Liberty’ respectively, these differences can be drawn out to paint a clear picture of what these philosophers advocated for society.

Rousseau distinguished between two types of freedom, natural liberty and the liberty that follows after natural liberty is given up. Natural liberty leads on to civil liberty, developmental liberty and moral liberty when the social contract is entered. Being a part of the civil state necessitates the surrender of natural freedom to the community. As the sovereign is made up of the people, everyone ends up giving their natural freedom to everyone else, totally and equally. “Each one of us places in common his person and all his powers under the supreme direction of the general will; and we receive back as a corporate body, each member, as an indivisible part of the whole” (Rousseau 50). Thus this implies that the will of the sovereign is the general will.

Natural liberty has a very negative connotation for Rousseau. According to him, it is the ability to obtain and keep what one can as well as pursue one’s desires with impunity. A person’s …show more content…

Both Rousseau and Mill also differ in opinion when it comes to punishment for not following society’s laws. Rousseau is of the belief that members of society, having entered the social contract, should be coerced into being ‘free’. Mill on the other hand, states that society cannot force members to follow the law, however, the public opinion of a lawbreaker will tend to be unfavorable. He believes that this pressure from society will be punishment enough to encourage the lawbreaker to mend their

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