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Democracy and Participation: Rousseau, Discourse on Inequality (part II)

By Steven B. Smith - Yale
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Lecture Description

The discussion on the origins of inequality in the Second Discourse continues. This lecture focuses on amour-propre, a faculty or a disposition that is related to a range of psychological characteristics such as pride, vanity, and conceit. The Social Contract is subsequently discussed with an emphasis on the concept of freedom and how one's desire to preserve one's freedom is often in conflict with that of others to protect and defend their own. General will becomes Rousseau's solution to the problem of securing individual liberty.

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Course Index

  1. Introduction: What is Political Philosophy?
  2. Socratic Citizenship: Plato, Apology
  3. Socratic Citizenship: Plato, Crito
  4. Plato's Republic I-II
  5. Philosophers and Kings: Plato, Republic, III-IV
  6. Philosophers and Kings: Plato, Republic, V
  7. Aristotle's Politics
  8. Aristotle's Politics, part 2
  9. Aristotle's Politics, part 3
  10. Machiavelli, The Prince
  11. Machiavelli, The Prince, cont.
  12. The Sovereign State: Hobbes, Leviathan
  13. The Sovereign State: Hobbes, Leviathan
  14. The Sovereign State: Hobbes, Leviathan
  15. Constitutional Government: Locke, Second Treatise (1-5)
  16. Constitutional Government: Locke, Second Treatise (7-12)
  17. Constitutional Government: Locke, Second Treatise (13-19)
  18. Democracy and Participation: Rousseau, Discourse on Inequality (author's preface, part I)
  19. Democracy and Participation: Rousseau, Discourse on Inequality (part II)
  20. Democracy and Participation: Rousseau, Social Contract, I-II
  21. Democratic Statecraft: Tocqueville, Democracy in America
  22. Democratic Statecraft: Tocqueville, Democracy in America
  23. Democratic Statecraft: Tocqueville, Democracy in America
  24. In Defense of Politics