Jean-Jacques Rousseau

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    Thomas Hobbes and Jean Jacques Rousseau were 17th and 18th century philosophers recognized for their works in political philosophy. Their visions and analysis of the world share original ideas that are still relevant to contemporary politics. Despite addressing many of the same issues, the two philosophers confronted on several ideas regarding human nature, the state of nature, and the social contract. This paper will examine the similarities and differences between the three issues by utilizing

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    savagery, and civilized. These constructed categories have put a label on people who do not share the same ideas as one another. These different views of human nature have come to propel change and have come to revolutionized human history. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Michel de Montaigne, and Thomas Hobbes all differ on their ideas of human nature, but they also share common ground. For some of these men the practices of different cultures are categorized as savagery, and for others it has been viewed as

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    In the book The Basic Political Writings written by Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Rousseau in the beginning of the book states a very important question that he hopes to answer in parts throughout the book, the question being: What is the origin of inequality among men, and is it authorized by the natural law? Rousseau takes a different approach than all the other philosophers on trying to figure out the origin of man and their so-called inequality. Rousseau’s point of view on the state of nature differs

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    Jean-Jacques Rousseau was a philosopher in the 18th century who studied the way children interact with each other in a playful setting. His theories concerning childhood development have impacted many progressive educational theories still in use today. However, his work is not supported by the popular childhood theories of the present age; for example, Rousseau speaks out against imaginative play in his work Emile, which is currently considered to be a historical milestone in early and middle childhood

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    John Locke and Jean-Jacque Rousseau were both thinkers that contributed to the notion of government by social contract in their writing by expressing their ideas of the human state of nature, natural rights and human innovation. The common goal of these two and many radical idealists is to preserve our lives and create a safe, stable society that is striving for the common good. A few of the many differences include Locke’s belief that the human state of nature is not a state of war, industrialization

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    individual. Modern thinkers John Locke and Jean Jacques Rousseau also fall into this category. During the 18th century, Locke and Rousseau excelled in the world of philosophy, extending their views to broaden the horizons of government and political principles. Both men begin them by stating their version of the State of Nation, just as Hobbes did before them through his writings. Once men find their way out of the State of Nature in both societies, Locke and Rousseau provide natural orders which allow the

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    Topic #1 Jean-Jacques Rousseau makes the provocative claim that the transfer of sovereignty involves in the election of representatives signifies a loss of freedom: "The instant a people chooses representatives, it is no longer free." (On the Social Contract, p.103) Do you agree with Rousseau? The book "On the Social Contract" published on 1762 by Jean-Jacques Rousseau is one of his most important works, which points out the basis for a genuine political order and freedom. One of Jean-Jacques Rousseau

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    Rousseau starts his discourse with the quote, “What is natural has to be investigated not in beings that are depraved, but in those that are good according to nature” (Aristotle. Politics. II). It is this idea that Rousseau uses to define his second discourse. Rousseau begins his story of human nature by “setting aside all the facts” (132). Rousseau believes the facts of the natural state of humanity are not necessary to determine the natural essence of human nature, and adding facts based on man’s

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    When Jean Jacques Rousseau wrote his Social Contract, the idea of liberty and freedom were not new theories. Many political thinkers such as John Locke and Thomas Hobbes had already evolved with their own clarification of liberty and freedom of mankind, and in fact John Locke had already publicized his views and ideas on the social contract as well. In Rousseau’s case, what he did was to transform the ideas incorporated by such substantial words, and present us to another method to the social contract

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    Jean Jacques-Rousseau was a political philosopher during the eighteenth century. His thoughts and beliefs were very influential on other philosophers that came after him. He not only influenced later thinkers, but also revolutions and theories. This caused him to make an impact on philosophy. Rousseau was not only a philosopher, but a writer, and throughout his life he had published some major works. Rousseau was an eminence in philosophy and became a significant figure throughout the eighteenth

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