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The Discourse On The Origin Of Inequality By Juis Rousseau

Decent Essays

Jean-Jacques Rousseau is known as one of the most influential Enlightenment and French Revolution philosophers of the eighteenth century. In 1749, Rousseau read a copy of a newspaper, The Mercure de France that contained an advert for an essay contest asking readers if recent advances in the arts and sciences were making the world a better place. Rousseau’s published response, A Discourse on the Sciences and Arts, argued that civilization and progress had not improved people, but instead, corrupted their virtue and morality. It was this discourse that brought Rousseau fame and the foundation to write a second discourse, The Discourse on the Origin of Inequality. In his second dissertation, Rousseau argued that humans are naturally good, …show more content…

Therefore, as man continued to move further and further away from the “animal condition” and more towards progress and civilization, man became less free. Rousseau states that “the first person who, having enclosed a plot of ground, thought of saying this is mine and found people simple enough to believe him was the true founder of civil society” (91). As a result of the creation of establishments and institutions of property, men created laws and the creation of laws created inequality among people. Rousseau stated that the only thing natural man cared about was survival. Additionally, natural man did not have possessions and therefore, there was nothing that could trigger envy or jealousy. Competition did not exist. However, civilization has corrupted humans. Today, man cares a lot about power and reputation. Rousseau states that, “ . . . the savage lives within himself; sociable man, always outside himself, knows how to live only in the opinion of others, and it is from their judgment alone that he, so to speak, derives the feeling of his own existence” (117). He continues by stating that, “ . . . everything becomes fabricated and staged -- honor, friendship, virtue, and often even the vices themselves, which men ultimately discover the secret of-- boasting about . . .” (117). In other words, man has not only moved further away from “animal condition” but from oneself.

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