Jean-Jacques Rousseau's On Liberty

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Personal liberties are important for an individual to possess as it determines the amount of freedom and choice one has in life. Throughout time different political thinkers have debated the extent of personal liberties that an individual ought to possess and these writers have attempted to understand what the best relationship between the state’s power and its citizens’ freedom should be. Thomas Hobbes believes in limited freedom while Jean-Jacques Rousseau and John Stuart Mill both argue in favour of more extensive personal liberty. Hobbes’ Leviathan, Rousseau’s Of the Social Contract and Mill’s On Liberty all describe the importance of liberty and how it ought to be perceived; Hobbes takes a much more conservative route in his definition …show more content…

Rousseau argues that there are different types of liberty and the challenge is to find a form of association in which everyone is going to benefit from by living in a community and yet remain as free as they were in the state of nature and obey only themselves. Rousseau sought to “find a form of association which defends and protects the community the person and the goods of every associate and by means of which each, uniting with all, nevertheless obeys only himself, and remains as free as before” (Rousseau, 440). In Rousseau’s conception of freedom people attain their freedom through a transformation from a state of nature to civil society. Rousseau wants individuals to maintain their personal freedom and argues that; “a convention which stipulates absolute authority on the one side and unlimited obedience on the other is vain and contradictory” (Rousseau, 439). Rousseau argues that to hand over one’s general rights of ruling oneself to another person or body constitutes a form of slavery and that to recognize such an authority would amount to an abduction of moral agency. Rousseau favours a society where the general will, or will of the whole, prevails. In doing so, this allows people to be seen as equals and not have their voice shut out. Rousseau believes it is important for people to participate and have a direct say in decisions and important matters. Rousseau argues that people attain their freedom through a transformation from the state of nature to civil society-one can be both free and subject to political authority. During this process people come together to make up the sovereign and “this act of association produces a moral and collective body, which is composed of as many members as the assembly has voices” (Rousseau, 440). Rousseau believes that freedom is achieved when individuals join together to create a

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