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Rousseau's Moral Realism: Replacing Natural Law with the General Will

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  • Melzer, Arthur M.

Abstract

The Social Contract is reinterpreted by emphasizing its relation to Rousseau's other writings and doctrines. In the spirit of Hobbesian realism, Rousseau regards natural law and other forms of “private morality” as ineffectual, invalid, and in practice dangerous tools of oppression and subversion. But, still more realistic than Hobbes, Rousseau thinks it impossible to build a nonoppressive state on men's selfish interests alone and embraces the classical view that morality or virtue is politically necessary (as well as intrinsically good). Rousseau's doctrine of the natural goodness of man, however, which traces all vice to the effects of oppression, leads him to conclude that the non-oppression more or less guaranteed by the absolute rule of general laws is also sufficient to make men virtuous. Thus Rousseau can declare law as such (General Will) infallible and “sovereign”—and he must do so in order to protect rule of law from its greatest danger, the subversive appeal to “natural law.”

Suggested Citation

  • Melzer, Arthur M., 1983. "Rousseau's Moral Realism: Replacing Natural Law with the General Will," American Political Science Review, Cambridge University Press, vol. 77(3), pages 633-651, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:apsrev:v:77:y:1983:i:03:p:633-651_24
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    Cited by:

    1. Shuyang Lin, 2024. "A synthesis of Kantian ethics and Rousseauvian General Will in justifying the moral ground of political laws," Palgrave Communications, Palgrave Macmillan, vol. 11(1), pages 1-12, December.

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