Results for ' Rousseau, Bourdieu, common interest, general will, physiocracy'

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  1.  34
    Intérêt commun ou intérêt général? De l’enjeu d’une décision terminologique chez Rousseau.Théophile Pénigaud de Mourgues - 2017 - Astérion 17 (17).
    In this article, I offer a new interpretation for Rousseau’s surprisingly spare use of the phrase “general interest” in his works. My starting point is the very notion of interest in his political thought. For Rousseau, interest is not a matter of calculation but of experience; properly speaking, once we are in the state of society, there is nothing like an individual interest because all our interests are shared with somebody else. And our political interest (our sensitivity to society’s (...)
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  2.  37
    Intérêt commun ou intérêt général? De l’enjeu d’une décision terminologique chez Rousseau.Théophile Pénigaud de Mourgues - 2017 - Astérion. Philosophie, Histoire des Idées, Pensée Politique 17.
    Dans cet article, je reviens sur un constat bien connu, mais jamais parfaitement élucidé : Rousseau n’emploie que très exceptionnellement l’expression « intérêt général », à laquelle il préfère celle d’« intérêt commun ». Je m’efforce d’y apporter une explication nouvelle, en partant d’un réexamen du concept même d’« intérêt » dans son œuvre, auquel il faut prêter un sens assez différent de celui auquel la philosophie politique nous a accoutumés : l’intérêt ne saurait être individuel, il ne saurait s’identifier (...)
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  3.  28
    The General Will: Rousseau, Marx, Communism.Andrew Levine - 1993 - Cambridge University Press.
    This bold and unabashedly utopian book advances the thesis that Marx's notion of communism is a defensible, normative ideal. However, unlike many others who have written in this area, Levine applies the tools and techniques of analytic philosophy to formulate and defend his radical, political programme. The argument proceeds by filtering the ideals and institutions of Marxism through Rousseau's notion of the 'general will'. Once Rousseau's ideas are properly understood it is possible to construct a community of equals who (...)
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  4. Discourse on Political Economy: And, The Social Contract.Jean-Jacques Rousseau - 1994 - New York: Oxford University Press. Edited by Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
    Revolutionary in its own time and controversial to this day, this work is a permanent classic of political theory and a key source of democratic belief. Rousseau's concepts of "the general will" as a mode of self-interest uniting for a common good, and the submission of the individual to government by contract inform the heart of democracy, and stand as its most contentious components today. Also included in this edition is Rousseau's Discourse on Political Economy", a key transitional (...)
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  5.  57
    [Book review] the general will, Rousseau, Marx, communism. [REVIEW]Keith Graham - 1993 - Science and Society 59 (2):223-225.
    This bold and unabashedly utopian book advances the thesis that Marx's notion of communism is a defensible, normative ideal. However, unlike many others who have written in this area, Levine applies the tools and techniques of analytic philosophy to formulate and defend his radical, political programme. The argument proceeds by filtering the ideals and institutions of Marxism through Rousseau's notion of the 'general will'. Once Rousseau's ideas are properly understood it is possible to construct a community of equals who (...)
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  6.  49
    Recollection as Realization: Remythologizing Plato.Mary F. Rousseau - 1981 - Review of Metaphysics 35 (2):337 - 348.
    SEARCHING and learning... are altogether recollection". A long and strong tradition in Platonic studies has taken this statement as a literal description of what happens when we come to know something that we had not known before. That literal interpretation is commonly linked to a similarly literal interpretation of Plato's statements about the soul's cycle of rebirths, and to a transcendent rather than a transcendental view of the Ideas, one which gives them an ontological status separate from sensible particulars. Sensibles (...)
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  7.  17
    Green, Rousseau, and the Culture Pattern.D. H. Monro - 1951 - Philosophy 26 (99):347 - 357.
    There are, I think, three distinct senses in which Rousseau uses the term “general will.” He means by it, as the nineteenth century Idealists used to point out, something very like Kant's “good will,” which all men have in common and which cannot conflict with itself. But he also means, quite as often, the Utilitarian compromise, The mean between divergent interests which takes account of all of them and satisfies as many as possible. And, thirdly, he means something (...)
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  8.  58
    Machiavelli versus Rousseau: the social divisions and their role in a well-ordered republic.Renato Moscateli - 2015 - Trans/Form/Ação 38 (s1):121-138.
    RESUMO:As relações de conflito entre os grupos sociais constituem um tópico relevante para a filosofia política, e as maneiras distintas como elas são interpretadas dependem de uma visão mais ampla sobre as condições apropriadas a um Estado bem-ordenado. Maquiavel, por exemplo, ao refletir sobre o caso da Roma Antiga, procurou refutar aqueles que condenavam os tumultos entre os nobres e a plebe da cidade, como se eles tivessem provocado apenas males à república. Para o autor, tais tumultos estavam entre as (...)
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  9.  41
    Gersonides on Providence: A Jewish Chapter in the History of the General Will.Steven M. Nadler - 2001 - Journal of the History of Ideas 62 (1):37-57.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Ideas 62.1 (2001) 37-57 [Access article in PDF] Gersonides on Providence: A Jewish Chapter in the History of the General Will Steven Nadler The notion of the "general will" has proven to be one of the more influential and at the same time enduringly perplexing concepts in the history of ideas. Its most famous appearance is of course, in Rousseau's political philosophy (...)
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  10. The General Will: Rousseau, Marx, Communism.Frederick Neuhouser - 1995 - Philosophical Review 104 (4):597.
    The principal aim of Andrew Levine’s most recent book is to defend the ideal of communism. Its strategy is to demonstrate the coherence and desirability of that ideal by invoking Rousseau’s concept of the general will. More specifically, the general will is supposed to provide a model for the kind of cooperation that will take place among members of a communistic society. Since the notion of a general will is itself highly obscure, this book can also be (...)
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  11.  43
    The limits of sovereignty in Rousseau.José Veríssimo Teixeira da Mata - 1995 - Trans/Form/Ação 18:95-104.
    This article intends to make clear the boundaries of the sovereign power in Rousseau, by the analysis of the following concepts: sovereignty, general will, citizenship, common interest, private interest.Este artigo intenta esclarecer os limites do poder soberano em Rousseau, pela análise dos seguintes conceitos: soberania, vontade geral, cidadania, interesse comum e particular.
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  12.  17
    A Shared Capacity Account of Rousseau's General Will.Chandler Abram Hatch - 2024 - Philosophers' Imprint 24.
    Interpretations of Rousseau’s general will have tended to privilege one of two aspects of the general will over the other. Procedural accounts identify the general will with the result of a majority vote of all the citizens. Common good accounts identify the general will with the common good (often as publicly understood by the citizens). In this paper, I argue that identifying the general will with either of these aspects makes the Rousseau’s insistence (...)
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  13. Autonomy and Common Good: Interpreting Rousseau’s General Will.Michael J. Thompson - 2017 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 25 (2):266-285.
    Rousseau’s project in his Social Contract was to construct a conception of human subjectivity and political institutions that would transcend what he saw to be the limits of liberal political theory of his time. I take this as a starting point to put forward an interpretation of his theory of the general will as a kind of social cognition that is able to preserve individual autonomy and freedom alongside concerns with the collective welfare of the community. But whereas many (...)
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  14.  70
    Justice and the General Will: Affirming Rousseau's Ancient Orientation.David Lay Williams - 2005 - Journal of the History of Ideas 66 (3):383-411.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Justice and the General Will:Affirming Rousseau's Ancient OrientationDavid Lay WilliamsThere is much confusion about how to characterize the work of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. His thought has at various times been related to such dissimilar thinkers as Plato and Hobbes. From Plato he is said to have acquired his affinities for community and civic virtue. And one does not have to look too hard to find his praise for the (...)
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  15.  84
    The General Will and the Legislator in Rousseau’s on the Social Contract.Stuart Dalton - 1996 - Southwest Philosophy Review 12 (2):85-97.
  16.  33
    Love. [REVIEW]Mary F. Rousseau - 1985 - Review of Metaphysics 39 (1):170-172.
    It is a truism that affectivity has been by and large neglected in Western philosophy in recent centuries, while analyses of knowledge, especially rational thought, abound. Classical American thought, which frequently takes community as a main theme, is something of an exception. But the fact remains that books with titles like this one's and Solomon's earlier The Passions raise hopes that a neglected and important philosophical topic is to receive some of the attention that it deserves. Solomon's Love: Emotion, Myth (...)
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  17.  8
    Bourdieu and after: a guide to relational phenomenology.Will Atkinson - 2020 - New York: Routledge.
    Pierre Bourdieu was the most influential sociologist of the later 20th Century. The framework he developed continues to inspire countless researchers across the globe and provokes intense debates long after his death. Novel concepts, innovative applications and countless elaborations spring up every day, bulking out and shaping a distinct, if not always entirely consistent, body of work that might be characterised as a recognisable tradition. For those coming to Bourdieu for the first time, therefore, and interested in using his ideas (...)
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  18.  64
    Plato on Punishment. [REVIEW]Mary F. Rousseau - 1983 - Review of Metaphysics 36 (4):941-942.
    This book is a brilliant and painstaking analysis, at once historical and systematic, of Plato's penology. The initial sinking of a philosopher's heart at the sight of philosophy done by a classicist is soon stopped and even reversed. For Mackenzie immediately displays a mastery of the philosophical issues involved in a critique of penal institutions. The book opens with five chapters that clearly set forth the basic incongruity: experience shows that penal institutions are inevitable in human societies, and yet punishment--because (...)
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  19.  27
    Chapter Fifteen. Rousseau: The General Interest in the General Will.Nannerl O. Keohane - 1980 - In Philosophy and the State in France the Renaissance to the Enlightenment /Nannerl O. Keohane. --. --. Princeton University Press, C1980. pp. 420-450.
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  20.  17
    CHAPTER 2. The Threat of Interests to the General Will: Rousseau’s Critique of Particularism.Joseph M. Schwartz - 1995 - In The Permanence of the Political: A Democratic Critique of the Radical Impulse to Transcend Politics. Princeton University Press. pp. 33-69.
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  21.  40
    Camus and Rousseau: freedom, justice and ‘the despotism of the general will’.John Foley - 2022 - History of European Ideas 48 (5):614-633.
    ABSTRACT Despite being generally recognised as Camus’ most important philosophical essay, L’Homme révolté is rather neglected in the scholarship and enjoys a limited readership, especially among Anglophone critics and readers – a fact brightly reflected in the questionable quality of the only English translation, by Anthony Bower, and in the decision of Hamish Hamilton and Penguin, Camus’ publishers in the UK, to cut about thirty pages of text from their edition, ‘in the interests of economy.’. This essay examines one brief (...)
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  22.  63
    Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Ernesto Laclau and the somewhat particular universal.Kevin Inston - 2009 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 35 (5):555-587.
    Rousseau's general will is mostly interpreted as promoting social unity at the expense of plurality. Conversely, this article argues that the general will depends on, and preserves, plurality for its formation and legitimacy. The general and the particular are not fixed opposites, for Rousseau, but are interdependent and contextually defined. The Rousseauian universal anticipates Laclau's notion of universality. The absence of any natural foundations for society deprives the universal of any pre-given identity. Likewise, the Laclauian universal names (...)
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  23.  13
    Enlightenment Thought: An Anthology of Sources.Margaret L. King - 2019 - Hackett Publishing Company.
    "Margaret L. King has put together a highly representative selection of readings from most of the more significant—but by no means the most obvious—texts by the authors who made up the movement we have come to call the 'Enlightenment.' They range across much of Europe and the Americas, and from the early seventeenth century until the end of the eighteenth. In the originality of the choice of texts, in its range and depth, this collection offers both wide coverage and striking (...)
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  24. Rousseau’s lawgiver as teacher of peoples: Investigating the educational preconditions of the social contract.Johan Dahlbeck & Peter Lilja - 2024 - Educational Philosophy and Theory.
    This paper argues that Rousseau’s lawgiver is best thought of as a fictional teacher of peoples. It is fictional as it reflects an idea that is entertained despite its contradictory nature, and it is contradictory in the sense that it describes ‘an undertaking beyond human strength and, to execute it, an authority that amounts to nothing’ (II.7; 192). Rousseau conceives of the social contract as a necessary device for enabling the transferal of individual power to the body politic, for subsuming (...)
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  25.  13
    Discourse on Political Economy and the Social Contract.Christopher Betts (ed.) - 2008 - Oxford University Press.
    Censored in its own time, the Social Contract remains a key source of democratic belief and is one of the classics of political theory. It argues concisely but eloquently, that the basis of any legitimate society must be the agreement of its members. As humans we were `born free' and our subjection to government must be freely accepted. Rousseau is essentially a radical thinker, and in a broad sense a revolutionary. He insisted on the sovereignty of the people, and made (...)
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  26. Freedom, dependence, and the general will.Frederick Neuhouser - 1993 - Philosophical Review 102 (3):363-395.
    n his Lectures on the Histmy 0f Philosophy Hegel credits Rousseau with an cpoch-making innovation in the realm 0f practical philosophy, an innovation said to consist in thc fact that Rousseau is thc first thinker t0 recognize "the free will" as thc fundamental principle 0f political philosophy} Since Hcgcl’s 0wn practical philosophy is explicitly grounded in an account 0f thc will and its freedom, Hcgcl’s assertion is clearly intended as an acknowledgment 0f his deep indebtedness t0 R0usscau’s social and political (...)
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  27. What Is the General Will?Gopal Sreenivasan - 2000 - Philosophical Review 109 (4):545-581.
    What is the general will? In this essay, I propose a simple and straightforward answer. Rousseau’s general will, I shall argue, is the totality of unrescinded decisions made by a community—that is, of an association of individuals contractually constituted as a “moral and collective body”—when its deliberation is subject to certain constraints.
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  28. The General Will Vs. The Will of All: Making Room for the People in a Transcendently Justified State.David Lay Williams - 1999 - Dissertation, The University of Texas at Austin
    In the founding documents of this country one finds appeals both to the sovereignty of the people and to abstract notions of rights, "justice," and "the common good". These two ideas are evoked almost as if there were no sense on behalf of the framers that these two ideas simultaneously held create a philosophic tension. Yet as history informs us, they are often contradictory in content. This theme was explored by Rousseau in his distinction of the general will (...)
     
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  29.  44
    Rousseau on needs, language and pity: The limits of 'public reason'.David James - 2011 - European Journal of Political Theory 10 (3):372-393.
    The idea of ‘public reason’ has recently been associated with Rousseau’s views on the formation of a general will. Advocates of this idea in the Kantian tradition tend to emphasize reflective acts of rational deliberation which, I suggest, are more suited to written than to spoken language. Rousseau’s accounts of the role of spoken language as a means of expressing human needs and the role of pity in the development of a moral form of reasoning, which allows one properly (...)
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  30.  46
    Rousseau’s Post-Liberal Self: Emile and the Formation of Republican Citizenship.Michael J. Thompson - 2021 - The European Legacy 26 (1):39-53.
    This article discusses Rousseau’s theory of the genesis and development of a “post-liberal self” and its political implications. In his Emile, or Education, Rousseau explores the distinctive features of the post-liberal self through Emile’s growing capacity to think in terms of his social interdependence with others and yet to maintain his critical autonomy. For Rousseau it is only such individuals with a highly developed moral and civic consciousness who are capable of articulating the general will and of properly participating (...)
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  31. Newtono dėmuo Rousseau mąstyme.Vygandas Aleksandravičius - 2018 - Logos: A Journal, of Religion, Philosophy Comparative Cultural Studies and Art 97:17-25.
    Newtonian impact on Rousseau’s Thinking Summary The most prominent works of Rousseau are written in the field of political philosophy. However, the success of his model of social contract, Rousseau acknowledges, depends on pedagogics. The best way to proceed with it is to return to the natural sources. Rousseau literally brings Emile “back to nature”, and goes to play in and study their natural environment. Playfully directing the kid, he makes experiments devoted to the gradual development of the kid’s body (...)
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  32.  67
    The general will and the speech community: British Idealism and the foundations of politics.Janusz Grygieńć - 2018 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 26 (4):660-680.
    ABSTRACTAlthough the British Idealists did not provide a systematic account of language as a distinct philosophical phenomenon, language is nonetheless a fundamental element of Idealist social and political philosophy. This is seen mostly in the Idealist treatment of the concept of general will, which resulted in a Hegelian theory of community, constituted by shared understandings and a shared account of the common good and common interest. This article contains analysis of the relations between language and socio-political institutions (...)
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  33.  57
    Aux limites de la volonté générale : silence, exil, ruse et désobéissance dans la pensée politique de Rousseau.Christopher Brooke - 2007 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 83 (4):425.
    Résumé — En réaction contre la diversité frappante des interprétations du concept de volonté générale chez Rousseau, cet article – qui entend aussi contribuer à cette interprétation – défend une lecture procédurale de la volonté générale qui serait donc le produit d’un vote majoritaire de l’assemblée ; il montre comment certains des passages du livre IV du Contrat social qui semblent se prêter le moins à cette interprétation peuvent cependant y être entièrement intégrés ; contre l’idée que la volonté générale (...)
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  34. Der allgemeine Wille. Zu Rousseaus Contrat social (1762).Andreas Dorschel - 2010 - Zeitschrift Für Didaktik der Philosophie Und Ethik 32 (1):31-33.
    In his 'Contrat social', § 2.1, Jean-Jacques Rousseau argues that the general will alone can steer the forces of the state towards the end for which it was instituted, i.e., the common good. The argument's logical structure is more intricate than it seems at first glance. And the intricacy appears to be deliberate. Rousseau's authorial strategy is designed to evoke the reader's voice in articulating the fundamentals of politics.
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  35.  88
    Representing the unrepresentable: Rousseau's legislator and the impossible object of the people.Kevin Inston - 2010 - Contemporary Political Theory 9 (4):393-413.
    Rousseau's paradox of how a multitude wills itself into the status of a sovereign people, by deciding to join the contract before existing as a people, with a general will to make that decision, presupposes the absence of any ultimate social grounds and the contingency of identities and structures. These presuppositions make Rousseau an unacknowledged precursor of Laclau's post-structuralist politics, refuting the view that Rousseau's politics seeks a totally transparent and harmonious state beyond the questioning and ambiguity defining the (...)
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  36.  67
    G.D.H. Cole on the General Will.Peter Lamb - 2005 - European Journal of Political Theory 4 (3):283-300.
    In his contribution to socialist thought G.D.H. Cole adopted and revised Rousseau’s concept of the general will. During his early guild socialist phase Cole drew on the general will in his scheme for a functional, associational democracy. In the late 1920s Cole began to question whether the socially oriented element of individual will might be expressed in the existing social and economic circumstances. In the 1930s he combined social democratic and Marxist tenets. Nevertheless, his interest in Rousseau persisted. (...)
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  37.  88
    The Field of Cultural Production.Pierre Bourdieu (ed.) - 1993 - Columbia University Press.
    During the last two decades, sociologist Pierre Bourdieu has become a dominant force in cultural activity ranging from taste in music and art to choices in food and lifestyles. _The Field of Cultural Production_ brings together Bourdieu's major essays on art and literature and provides the first introduction to Bourdieu's writings and theory of a cultural field that situates artistic works within the social conditions of their production, circulation, and consumption. Bourdieu develops a highly original approach to the study of (...)
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  38.  56
    Rousseau’s Émile.Mark D. Gedney - 1999 - The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 3:41-50.
    Rousseau’s discussion of education in Émile has for its essential background his rejection of a truly public education in modern society on the one hand and the rejection of the possibility of modern human beings developing in a state of natural innocence on the other hand. His suggestion in Émile is that a form of private education (“home-schooling”) is possible that preserves the inherent goodness of the natural state while at the same time providing the instruction necessary for the student (...)
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  39.  35
    Rousseau as Author: Consecrating One’s Life to the Truth.Damjan de Krnjevic-Miskovic - 2004 - Review of Metaphysics 57 (3):625-628.
    The subtitle of Rousseau as Author refers to Rousseau’s motto, which elegantly describes the gist of Rousseau’s now commonly practiced ideas of authorship and responsibility, and concerns three overlapping issues: Rousseau’s well-known truthtelling in matters public and private, his devotion to a peculiar understanding of philosophy as a way of life, and his singular boldness in making statements that he knew could result in literary and political persecution. As Kelly says, the focus of the book is on the third issue, (...)
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  40.  63
    Rousseau--Totalitarian or Liberal? [REVIEW]E. B. J. - 1957 - Review of Metaphysics 10 (3):537-537.
    The author's thesis is that Rousseau is fundamentally a liberal with a streak of totalitarian sentiment. Confusion within Rousseau's thought between freedom and social cohesion, individuality and patriotism, as well as a confusion of moral and political freedom, give rise to the dual emphasis. Although he centers upon a genuine problem for Rousseau, the author fails to recognize the importance of the general will as a means of solving the conflicts he notes.--J. E. B.
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  41. Kant and Rousseau on the critique of philosophical theology: The primacy of practical reason.Philip A. Quadrio - 2009 - Sophia 48 (2):179-193.
    This paper explores the Rousseauian background to Kant’s critique of metaphysics and philosophical theology. The core idea is that the rejection of metaphysics and philosophical theology is part of a turn from theoretical to practical reason influential on European philosophy of religion, a turn we associate with Kant but that is prefigured by Rousseau. Rousseau is not, however, a thinker normally associated with the notion of metaphysical criticism, nor the notion of the primacy of practical reason. The paper draws out (...)
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  42.  37
    The limits of subtractive politics: Agamben and Rousseau’s inheritance.Sergei Prozorov - 2021 - Contemporary Political Theory 20 (3):636-656.
    The article critically engages with Giorgio Agamben’s reading of Rousseau in order to explore the affinities between the two authors’ subtractive approach to political subjectivation. In The Kingdom and the Glory. Agamben argues that Rousseau’s Social Contract reproduces, in a secularized manner, the providential paradigm of government, whose origins Agamben finds in early Christianity. This paradigm establishes a fictitious articulation between transcendent sovereignty and immanent government, presenting particular acts of government as emanating from general divine laws. We shall demonstrate (...)
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  43.  41
    The paradox of the origin of political power in Rousseau.Ligia Pavan Baptista - 2015 - Trans/Form/Ação 38 (s1):111-120.
    RESUMO:O presente artigo pretende abordar a forma original com a qual Rousseau focaliza a questão da origem do poder político, tema que é central na teoria política moderna. Em sua obra Do Contrato Social, o autor examina as razões, aparentemente paradoxais, pelas quais alguém, nascido livre, se escravizaria voluntariamente, obedecendo a outro e não a si próprio. Distanciando-se da influência de Hobbes e Locke, o autor apresenta a tese do contrato social, fundado no conceito de vontade geral, como o único (...)
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  44.  55
    The Mystery of the Ministry: From Particular Wills to the General Will.Pierre Bourdieu - 2004 - Constellations 11 (1):37-43.
  45.  74
    Finite Community: Reading Jean-Jacques Rousseau with Jean-Luc Nancy.Kevin Inston - 2016 - The European Legacy 21 (2):184-204.
    Jean-Luc Nancy identifies Rousseau as the first to conceive community as a lost state of immediacy and transparency. Rousseau’s conception has allegedly shaped the western ideal of an immanent community. Nancy deconstructs that ideal, arguing that immanence would suppress community; its oneness would block the being-with which enables our ontological being-in-common. This article argues that Rousseau never posits a lost community but actually explores, like Nancy, the political closure of immanence. Man’s distinguishing trait of perfectibility, which renders him finite, (...)
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  46.  56
    Contract and confederation: notes on the role of international relations in Jean-Jacques Rousseau's political thought.José Oscar de Almeida Marques - 2010 - Trans/Form/Ação 33 (1):19-30.
    When we read Rousseau's Social Contract, we tend to focus on its explicit goal, which is to investigate and establish a safe and legitimate rule of administration for a single political community. In accordance with the abstract character of the work, we tend to see this community as something pre-existing and isolated, without asking what those individuals who decide to submit to the rule of his general will had initially in common, and how the political body thus formed (...)
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  47.  28
    Un problème de la légitimité politique dans la pensée de Rousseau.Norbert Lenoir - 2000 - Philosophiques 27 (2):323-350.
    Dans le Contrat Social , Rousseau semble fonder la légitimité politique sur deux institutions : le Souverain, siège de la puissance législative et le Gouvernement, lieu de la puissance exécutive. Pourtant, dans le livre IV du même ouvrage, il définit la nécessité d'une troisième institution : le Tribunat, situé en tiers entre le Souverain et le Gouvernement. Pour quelle raison Rousseau détermine-t-il la nécessité de ce troisième pouvoir pour fonder la légitimité démocratique ? La raison provient de la dynamique initiée (...)
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  48.  8
    The Social Contract Theory in the Vision of Jean-Jacques Rousseau.Raluca Marinela Silaghi - 2018 - Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai Philosophia:21-34.
    The Social Contract Theory in the Vision of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Man is not social by nature, becoming social only under the influence of society. In the state of nature, man is solitary, autonomous, his own master. His only worry is to preserve his own life, to assure his necessities of living. With the formation of the first social groups (family), man no longer lives alone, starts to build a roof over his head, to assume certain responsibilities, to enter into communication (...)
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    Jean-Jacques Rousseau.Roger D. Masters - 1967 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 5 (4):373-376.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:BOOK REVIEWS 373 in the analysis of the "artificial" virtue of justice. Though he uses the term "faculties" as synonymous with energies or powers, he warns against the "faculty psychology" that uses faculties as explanations or causes. Hume writes: "By will I mean nothing but the internal impression we feel.., when we knowingly give rise to any new motion of our body or new perception of our mind." A (...)
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  50.  64
    What Rousseau meant by the General Will.James McAdam - 1967 - Dialogue 5 (4):498-515.
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