
Works cited (3)
Ideas this author touches 84 Ideas · click an Idea to read in context
State45Law35Wealth32Government29Democracy26Man24Monarchy24Justice20Constitution19Love18War And Peace17Family16Tyranny16Virtue And Vice16Labor15Education14Happiness14Slavery14Animal13Knowledge13Nature13Religion13Honor12Progress12Emotion11Language11Liberty11Revolution11Citizen10Life And Death10Punishment10Aristocracy9Habit9Will9Custom And Convention8Good And Evil8Idea8Desire7God7Medicine7Memory And Imagination7Mind7Philosophy7Science7Evolution6Opinion6Art5Duty5Necessity And Contingency5Oligarchy5Pleasure And Pain5Reasoning5Relation5Sense5Sign And Symbol5Universal And Particular5Cause4Courage4Experience4Prophecy4Prudence4Truth4History3Opposition3Form2Hypothesis2Judgment2One And Many2Rhetoric2Theology2Wisdom2Beauty1Chance1Change1Definition1Fate1Immortality1Logic1Mechanics1Poetry1Principle1Quantity1Same And Other1Time1
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Passages by work
The Social Contract2 passages
Social Contract, BK n, 404b-c✓ correct
MEAN to inquire if, in the civil order, there can be any sure and legitimate rule of administration, men being taken as they are and laws as they might be. In this inquiry I shall endeavour always to unite what right sanctions with what is prescribed by interest, in order that justice and utility may in no case be divided.
I enter upon my task without proving the importance of the subject. I… Read the rest of this passage →
Social Contract, BK iv, 428a-432b passim✓ correct
AS long as several men in assembly regard themselves as a single body, they have only a single will which is concerned with their common preservation and general well-being. In this case, all the springs of the State are vigorous and simple and its rules clear and luminous; there are no embroilments or conflicts of interests; the common good is everywhere clearly apparent, and only good sense is… Read the rest of this passage →
Cited under: Animal · Aristocracy · Cause · Chance · Citizen · Constitution · Courage · Custom And Convention · Democracy · Duty · Experience · Family · Fate · God · Government · Habit · Happiness · History · Honor · Justice · Labor · Law · Liberty · Man · Mind · Monarchy · Necessity And Contingency · Oligarchy · One And Many · Opinion · Opposition · Pleasure And Pain · Poetry · Prophecy · Prudence · Punishment · Quantity · Relation · Religion · Revolution · Sign And Symbol · Slavery · State · Theology · Time · Tyranny · Universal And Particular · Virtue And Vice · War And Peace · Wealth
Discourse on the Origin of Inequality1 passage
Inequality, 337c-d✓ correct
Discourse on the Origin and the Foundations of Inequality Among Men, by Jean-Jacques Rousseau : preface2
Discourse on the Origin and the Foundations of Inequality Among Men, by Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Notice on the Notes
I have added some notes to this work in accordance with my lazy habit of working on this and that. These notes wander sometimes so far from the subject that it is not good to…
Cited under: Animal · Aristocracy · Art · Beauty · Cause · Change · Citizen · Constitution · Courage · Custom And Convention · Definition · Democracy · Desire · Duty · Education · Emotion · Evolution · Experience · Family · Form · God · Good And Evil · Government · Habit · Happiness · History · Honor · Hypothesis · Idea · Immortality · Judgment · Justice · Knowledge · Labor · Language · Law · Liberty · Life And Death · Logic · Love · Man · Mechanics · Medicine · Memory And Imagination · Mind · Monarchy · Nature · Necessity And Contingency · Oligarchy · Opinion · Opposition · Philosophy · Pleasure And Pain · Principle · Progress · Prudence · Punishment · Reasoning · Relation · Religion · Revolution · Rhetoric · Same And Other · Science · Sense · Sign And Symbol · Slavery · State · Theology · Truth · Tyranny · Universal And Particular · Virtue And Vice · War And Peace · Wealth · Will · Wisdom
A Discourse on Political Economy1 passage
Political Economy, 369c-d / Social Contract, BK iv, 427a-d✓ correct
The word Economy, or Œconomy, is derived from _οἰκός, a house_, and _νόμος, law_, and meant originally only the wise and legitimate government of the house for the common good of the whole family. The meaning of the term was then extended to the government of that great family, the State. To distinguish these two senses of the word, the latter is called _general_ or _political_ economy, and the… Read the rest of this passage →
Cited under: Aristocracy · Art · Citizen · Constitution · Democracy · Duty · Education · Emotion · Family · Good And Evil · Government · Honor · Justice · Law · Liberty · Life And Death · Love · Medicine · Monarchy · Nature · Necessity And Contingency · One And Many · Opposition · Philosophy · Prudence · Punishment · Rhetoric · State · Virtue And Vice · War And Peace · Wealth · Will · Wisdom