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On
the Social Contract or Principles of Political Right
by Jean Jacques Rousseau
Translated by Ian Johnston
Long hailed as one of the most original, controversial, and influential
works of modern political theory, Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s On the Social
Contract or Principles of Political Right (1762) sets out to address an
apparently insoluble difficulty: how can we organize a political
community so as to guarantee its members the complete physical and
emotional freedom given to them by nature, while at the same time
ensuring peaceful order and cooperation within the state. How can we
“find a form of association which defends and protects with full
communal force the person and the possessions of each member and in
which each person, by uniting with all, nevertheless obeys only himself
and remains as free as before.”
Rousseau’s solution to this problem offers a vision of a republican
constitution in which the citizens are free because, as rational beings,
they choose to live in a state where they all have an equal share in the
sovereign power and are all equally subject to the laws established by
the general will of all. No matter
what the form of government, in order to be legitimate, it must be
subject to the sovereignty of the people.
On Social Contract is justly famous as a collectivist response to the
more individualistic liberalism of Hobbes and Locke. For Rousseau true
freedom in the modern state can only be realized if the citizens, as
rational individuals, subordinate their selfish personal desires to the
laws enacted by the general will of all—citizens, he states in one of
his best known and most paradoxical sayings “must be forced to be free.”
Only then can they realize their full
potential as free moral beings.
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