Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778) was a Swiss philosopher and a pivotal figure of the European Enlightenment . The French Revolution was shaped more by Rousseau’s ideas than by the works of any other figure. Rousseau was born in Geneva, where he was raised and educated by his father, a skilled clockmaker. After a number of different jobs and ...

  2. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 1712-1778, lived and wrote during what was arguably the headiest period in the intellectual history of modern France–the Enlightenment. He was one of the bright lights of that intellectual movement, contributing articles to the Encyclopdie of Diderot, and participating in the salons in Paris, where the great ...

  3. Some of the most important writers of the Enlightenment were the Philosophes of France, especially Voltaire and the political philosopher Montesquieu. Other important Philosophes were the compilers of the Encyclopédie, including Denis Diderot, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and Condorcet.

  4. Political philosophy - Rousseau, Social Contract, Liberty: The revolutionary romanticism of the Swiss French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau may be interpreted in part as a reaction to the analytic rationalism of the Enlightenment. He was trying to escape the aridity of a purely empirical and utilitarian outlook and attempting to create a substitute for revealed religion. Rousseau’s Émile ...

  5. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, his life, achievements, and contributions to the Enlightenment/ The Age of Reason as well as an explanation of his work The Social Contract. * Extra information links are provided for further research if perhaps information needed was not found. Jean-Jacques Rousseau was born in Geneva, Switzerland on June 28, 1712.

  6. The Social Contract, major work of political philosophy by the Swiss-born French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712–78). Du Contrat social (1762; The Social Contract) is thematically continuous with two earlier treatises by Rousseau: Discours sur les sciences et les arts (1750; A Discourse on.

  7. History of Europe - Rousseau, Enlightenment, Revolution: Diderot prefigured the unconventional style that found its archetype in Jean-Jacques Rousseau. In his novel of the 1760s, Rameau’s Nephew, Diderot’s eccentric hero persuades his bourgeois uncle, who professes virtue, to confess to actions so cynical as to be a complete reversal of accepted values.

  1. People also search for