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Comparing Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, And Jean-Jacques Rousseau

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Over the years, there have been many interpretations when it comes to what the social contract entail and how gets reflected in laws. Three of the most recognized opinions come from Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Although, there have been many different viewpoints on the Social Contract, John Locke's theory is the most correct and has the strongest argument for reasons such as, his realistic view on society and the Social Contract.
The concept of social contract theory is that man lived in a state of nature with no government or laws to regulate them. (Academia, 2016)
To begin, Thomas Hobbes was a controversial English philosopher and political theorist, who lived during the English Civil war. A time of social, political, …show more content…

He believed that, prior to the Social Contract like was happy and all men were equal in the State of Nature. However, as time passed, humanity started increasing in population. People began living together in small families, then in small communities. Labour was introduced and so was leisure time. This leisure time led to invention of private property which for Rousseau constitutes humanity’s “fall from grace” out of the State of Nature; “Man is born free; and everywhere he is in chains….how did this change come about?” (Rousseau, 1750) These few lines are the start of Rousseau’s social and political works “The Social Contract”. He starts off describing humanity as being born good but they are ultimately corrupted by society. (Root of Educational Theory, 2003) Potentially arguing that civilization had a corrupting influence on humans. At this time the idea of a contract between citizens and the state should govern according to the “general well”. General will is when a man surrender their rights not to a single individual but to community as a whole. This would be a mutually beneficial relationship in which the state could be removed if people willed it. (Blair, 2004) Thus, Rousseau favoured people’s sovereignty to abandon society’s hypocrisy and

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