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Jean Jacques Rousseau Legacy

Decent Essays

Reave Shewmake
Travis Turner
World Lit 208
24 September 2015

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

Jean-Jacques Rousseau was born in Geneva on June 28th, 1712. Those who were present had no clue that this child’s life would serve as a catalyst for philosophical and political reform. Rousseau’s writings had so much influence in the 18th century that he “played a significant role in three different revolutions” (52). In fact his work leaves a legacy so large that you can trace almost all modern revolutions back to his writings. In 1749 Rousseau competed for an essay prize where the challenge was to write about if the advances that society has had in the arts and sciences has brought pureness to human morals. He submitted the essay and won first prize which vaulted him into the spotlight over night. He wrote that “intellectual advances had brought not moral purification but corruption, not improvement but decline” (53). The implication therefore is that the original sin is not the problem but the problem is actually society itself. He backs that up by saying “Human beings in a state of nature were compassionate and good; it was society itself that was to blame for creating inequality, greed, and aggression.” (53). This essay undermined hundreds and hundreds of years of philosophical and religious writing which put the crosshairs right on his back. In the time period that Rousseau lived this was a dangerous opinion to have.
Rousseau lived in the Age of enlightenment which was dominated by

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