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Jean-Jacques Rousseau - the Origin of Civil Society

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Argument Summary - The Origin of Civil Society

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

Rousseau's 'The Origin of Civil Society' talks about Social Contract, which stands for Laws of people and what they should abide by rather than a Monarchy.

Rousseau begins The Social Contract with the sensational opening sentence: Man was born free, but he is everywhere in chains, (Rousseau 55) and proceeds to argue that men need not be in chains. If a civil society, or state, could be based on a genuine social contract, as opposed to the fraudulent social contract, men would receive in exchange for their independence a better kind of freedom, namely true political, or republican, liberty. According to Rousseau, such liberty is to be found in obedience to a self-imposed law.

Civil society, as Rousseau describes it, comes into being to serve two purposes: to provide peace for everyone and to ensure the right to property for anyone lucky enough to have possessions. He writes, "What he gives is the whole man as he then is, with all his qualities of strength and power"(Rousseau 50). It is thus of some advantage to everyone, but mostly to the advantage of the rich, since it transforms their de facto ownership into rightful ownership and keeps the poor dispossessed. It is a somewhat fraudulent social contract that introduces government since the poor get so much less out of it than do the rich. Even so, the rich are no happier in civil society than are the poor because social man is never satisfied. Society leads men to hate one another to the extent that their interests conflict, and the best they are able to do is to hide their hostility behind a mask of courtesy. Thus, Rousseau regards the inequality between men not as a separate problem but as one of the features of the long process by which men become alienated from nature and from innocence.

According to Rousseau, true law, as described in The Social Contract, is just law, and what ensures its being just is that it is made by the people in its collective capacity as sovereign and obeyed by the same people in their individual capacities as subjects. Rousseau is confident that such laws could not be unjust because it is inconceivable that any people would make unjust laws for itself.

Thus, the social contract that brings society into being is a pledge, and the society remains in being as a pledged

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