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The Value Of Liberty ; Rousseau Vs. Mill

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The Value of Liberty; Rousseau v. Mill The views and conceptions of what liberty is have continued to change over time as society changes. Freedom is defined as the right to do “act, think, and speak as one wants” without anyone or anything infringing on that right, but there exists types of freedoms or liberties. Fyodor Dostoevsky, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Stuart Mill, and Thomas Jefferson all give their conceptions of what liberty is and while all of them believe government should not have so much authority or any authority at all, they all have similar and different views on freedom. While Rousseau believes that there should be a “social contract” between the individual and the sovereign, Stuart Mill disagrees and believes that authority can only be exercised over the individual if it is harmful. Mill understands what freedom really is and its value because he believes that public authority does not have legitimate power over the individual and that the individual should be able to exercise their rights without any interference. Rousseau does not truly understand what freedom is because the “general will” can interfere with an individual’s rights.

In “The Grand Inquisitor” written by Fyodor Dostoevsky, Dostoevsky focuses on free will of humans being given up in exchange for a more secure “free will”. Ivan reads aloud a poem he wrote in which Christ is reborn and goes to Spain, and there he is healing the sick. After healing the sick and a dead child, the Cardinal Grand

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