![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() How the sovereign authority maintains itself - cont. A distinction between two forms of self-love is central to Rousseau’s work. Various systems of legislation - Division of the laws - Book III: Which treats of political laws, that is to say, of the form of government: Government in general - Constituent principle in the various forms of government - Division of governments - Democracy - Aristocracy - Monarchy - Mixed governments - That all forms of government do not suit all countries - Marks of a good government - Abuse of government and its tendency to degenerate - Death of the body politic - How the sovereign authority maintains itself - How the sovereign authority maintains itself - cont. For Rousseau, inequality and difference are the product of a toxic cocktail of distorted needs, interests, desires and institutional arrangements that naturalize and normalize what is unnatural and inhumane. ![]() Book I: In which it is inquired why man passes from the state of nature to the state of society and what are the essential conditions of the compact - Subject of the first Book - First societies - Right of the strongest - Slavery - That we must always go back to a first convention - Social compact - Sovereign - Civil State - Real property - Book II: Which treats of legislation: That sovereignty is inalienable - That sovereignty is indivisible - Whether the general Will is fallible - Limits of the sovereign power - Right of life and death - Law - Legislator - People - People - cont. ![]()
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