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Rousseau's On The Social Contract

Decent Essays

Rousseau’s On the Social Contract follows his Discourse on the Origin of Inequality as a description for a working political body that serves in the best interest of civilized man in addition to rectifying some of the inequalities that emerged following the beginning of civil society and man’s separation from his natural state. Furthermore, the Social Contract justifies forcing citizens into freedom in large part due to man’s tendency towards vices such as cowardice and greed. By forcing citizens into an agreement where they must be free, Rousseau aims to prevent individuals from foolishly selling their freedom for short-lived advantages and requires that they participate in their own liberty through the general will. Overall, the social contract …show more content…

For the social contract to come into place, a “law of majority rule is itself established by agreement and presupposes unanimity on at least one occasion” . By requiring unanimity on the creation of the initial agreement, future minority opinions will agree to majority rule on future issues as opposed to attempting to disobey whatever decisions are made. Ultimately, the social contract aims to “find a form of association that defends and protects with all common forces the person and good of each associate, and, by means of which, each one, while uniting with all, nevertheless obeys only himself and remains as free as before”. The moment this association ends for whatever reason or its members violate it, they all return to their previous state of …show more content…

The bond between father and child is based on need and “as soon as the need ceases, the natural bond is dissolved.” More than need, the relationship is based on what is owed to the father (obedience) and the child (care). To relate back to political and civil societies, “the leader is the image of the father, the populace is the image of the children, and, since all are born equal and free, none give up their liberty except for their utility” . Since no liberty is relinquished in pursuit of this care, this relationship is markedly different from the master and servant relationship. Even the king and follower relationship require that members give up their liberty in exchange for protection of their property or whatever they fear they might lose at the hands of others. The father-child bond is built on compassion and duty, not fear or greed. Ideally, Rousseau seeks a social contract where citizens observe obedience to the rules of the sovereign while at the same time seeking care from it. By imitating the father-child relationship, man in civil society can relate to “the most ancient of all societies, and the only natural one.” Rousseau continues to say that in political societies where the leader acts as the father, love is replaced with the pleasure of ruling. However, when the leader is the sovereign and by extension the people themselves, I believe that people would

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