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  1. A summary of Book I: Chapters 1-5 in Jean-Jacques Rousseau's The Social Contract. Learn exactly what happened in this chapter, scene, or section of The Social Contract and what it means. Perfect for acing essays, tests, and quizzes, as well as for writing lesson plans.

  2. The Social Contract Jean-Jacques Rousseau 12. The first societies BOOK 1 This little treatise is salvaged from a much longer work that I abandoned long ago, having started it without thinking about whether I was capable of pulling it off. Of various bits that might be rescued from what I had written of that longer work, what I

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  3. Need help with Book 1, Introduction in Jean-Jacques Rousseau's The Social Contract? Check out our revolutionary side-by-side summary and analysis.

  4. In theory, Rousseau continues, people should simply seek freedom by resisting anyone who rules over them—but society, which is the “basis for all other rights,” requires that people agree to let others rule over them. His goal in this Book 1s to figure out what people must actually agree to.

  5. The Social Contract: summary. The Social Contract begins with the most famous words in the whole book: ‘man is born free, yet everywhere he is in chains’. Rousseau is interested in how modern society takes us away from this freedom we’re born with.

  6. Jun 5, 2014 · The social contract, as Rousseau asserts in his conclusion to Book I, establishes amoral and legitimate equality” (SC, 1.9.8, 56 [III: 367]), such that “all commit themselves under the same conditions and must enjoy all the same rights” (SC, 2.4.8, 61 [III: 374]).

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  8. Jul 19, 2014 · In certain passages in the Social Contract, in his criticism of the Abbé de Saint-Pierre's Project of Perpetual Peace, and in the second chapter of the original draft of the Social Contract, Rousseau takes into account the possibility of a still higher individual, "the federation of the world."

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