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discourse on inequalityの例文

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  • His " Discourse on Inequality " and " The Social Contract " are cornerstones in modern political and social thought.
  • Both Locke and Rousseau developed social contract theories in " Two Treatises of Government " and " Discourse on Inequality ", respectively.
  • Jean-Jacques Rousseau later criticized this second step in Discourse on Inequality, where he effectively argues that the natural right argument does not extend to resources that one did not create.
  • Society corrupts men only insofar as the Social Contract has not " de facto " succeeded, as we see in contemporary society as described in the " Discourse on Inequality " ( 1754 ).
  • At the end of the " Discourse on Inequality ", Rousseau explains how the desire to have value in the eyes of others comes to undermine personal integrity and authenticity in a society marked by interdependence, and hierarchy.
  • Jean-Jacques Rousseau strongly praised the simple life in many of his writings, especially in his " Discourse on the Arts and Sciences " ( 1750 ) and " Discourse on Inequality " ( 1754 ).
  • Jean-Jacques Rousseau, in his " Discourse on Inequality ", refers to Governor van der Stel by name in a story about a frontispiece of the " Discourse " features van der Stel and the " Hottentot " above the phrase, " Il retourne chez ses Egaux ".
  • These responses provide clarification for Rousseau's argument in the Discourse, and begin to develop a theme he further advances in the " Discourse on Inequality "  that misuse of the arts and sciences is one case of a larger theme, that man, by nature good, is corrupted by civilization.
  • In one letter he described it as one of his " principal writings, " and one of only three in which his philosophical system is developed ( the others being the " Discourse on Inequality " and " Emile " ), but in another instance he evaluated it as " at best mediocre ."
  • Many socialists have considered their advocacy as the preservation and extension of the radical humanist ideas expressed in Enlightenment doctrine such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau's " Discourse on Inequality ", Wilhelm von Humboldt's " Limits of State Action ", or Immanuel Kant's insistent defense of the French Revolution.
  • For Rousseau the remedy was not in going back to the primitive but in reorganizing society on the basis of a properly drawn up social compact, so as to " draw from the very evil from which we suffer [ i . e ., civilization and progress ] the remedy which shall cure it . " Lovejoy concludes that Rousseau's doctrine, as expressed in his " Discourse on Inequality ":
  • ""'The Social Contract " "', or " "'Of the Social Contract, or Principles of Political Right " "'(; 1762 ) by Jean-Jacques Rousseau, is a book in which Rousseau theorized about the best way to establish a political community in the face of the problems of commercial society, which he had already identified in his " Discourse on Inequality " ( 1754 ).