In the United States today we have a lot of different views as to
how the country should be run. The two major political parties are at ends with
each other and every month we can see that there are wars waging inside the
Senate and House of Representatives. How do you decide who is correct? How do
we know what the correct political order is? To get to any conclusion you have
to ask yourself, what is the state of nature? How can mankind continue to make
strides in human development and the arts of science and nature? Jean-Jacques Rousseau
and Thomas Hobbes both attempted to tackle these questions and develop an
irrefutable conclusion as to what the state of nature is and how a nation
should be run to achieve the greatest success possible.
Thomas Hobbes and Jean-Jacques Rousseau were born almost 125 years
apart, but missed each other by only 33 years and were both a large part in the
enlightenment period of history. Both started with the same core idea that
every man is born free, but from that standpoint, they go into completely different
directions. Hobbes, for example, believed that man was evil by nature and that
we needed on sovereign to govern the masses and if you didn’t abide by the laws
of the sovereign you could leave. Rousseau, on the other hand, believed that
man was free to do as he wishes with only a morale code to abide by and a
representative government set up to work for the greater good of the people as
a whole unit (OSU, 2002). So how did these two great minds end up in completely
different end places? Rousseau adored and considered Hobbes as one of this
greatest influences and spent many years studying up on his teachings. While
Hobbes writes about “the mutual transferring of rights” (i.e. implied
contracts) (Hobbes, 1651) and extensively writes about what contracts we hold
as humans to one another, Rousseau writes about how man must be “forced to be
free” (Rousseau, 1762) by a form of democracy in which the duties of the
representatives are to enforce where the people are to enact (Bertram, 2013).
Jean-Jacques Rousseau was born in 1712 in the city-state of
Geneva. His father was a watchmaker and he did not know his mother since she
did nine days after he was born. During his formative years he received most of
his education from his father who, after Rousseau had learned to read on his
own, had him read many books about the Roman Empire and those written by
Plutarch, Plato, and others on the republic of Rome. When he was ten years old, his father had to
flee the city in order to escape arrest, and he was sent to live with a
Calvinist pastor and apprenticed as an engraver for six years until he left the
city to see the world and learn more of the world around him (Bertram, 2013).
It was during this time wandering that Rousseau converted to
Catholicism and first saw the corruption within himself when he falsely accused
another servant in a household he was working of stealing a ribbon (OSU, 2002).
He continued to travel and learn for many more years coming under the influence
of those he met – at one point writing operas, becoming a teacher, and becoming
the secretary to the French Ambassador (Bertram, 2013).
One day while he went to visit Diderot in prison, Rousseau saw a
newspaper that was holding an essay competition in which the Academy of Dijon
asked whether man’s progression in art and science has improved or corrupted
the minds and morals of the people. It
is then that the gears in his head went into overdrive and he formed his belief
that man is inherently good by nature, but that it is society which turns man
evil. Throughout his life, Rousseau debated many other philosophers on what
makes man good or evil and why, which pulled primarily from his own life
experiences including his putting all five of his children at a foundling
hospital shortly after birth, his visits to the Italian countryside where he
wrote many operas, and most importantly
his exile from Paris and Geneva. He lived the rest of his life in England
living with many friends he had made along his travels, but was sent through
periods of mental instability which got more frequent as he aged (Bertram, 2013).
During the high point of his life, Rousseau published The Social Contract which centered on
how we have progressed from being a free man in nature to a corrupt society.
Rousseau’s most popular quote, which helps to get a better understanding of his
world views is that “man is born free, and he is everywhere in chains”
(Rousseau, 1762). This brought the ideas of his first and second discourses
full circle to be proven correct in The
Social Contract, he argues that we began our lives as humans as complete
equals no matter who you were because we were originally solitary beings.
Everything and anything that we needed we were able to get from nature such as
food or shelter, but as we grew, we soon got concepts of ownership because we
were living in closer and closer proximity to each other. Where one man could
own the land, another had to work hard for it. However, in his book Rousseau
discusses the central problem with living in close proximity to one another; by
living together and forming a collective group of people you have to submit
your own personal wills to the wills of the people, otherwise known as the
general will of the people.
He argued that this is how we started the real foundation of
society and that by conforming as one we work towards the betterment of mankind
and the common good. The common good of the people meant, at the same time,
more progress in the arts which in turn meant giving up more of your own
inherent freedoms to the general will which is brought forward by
representatives of a specific collective to work through any and all issues a
person may have and make it the law of the entire land (Rousseau, 1762). This
many seem like a familiar process to many of us because in Rousseau’s The Social Contract he actually lays out
the foundation of republicanism and the democratic process which we still use
today.
On a
different end of the spectrum we have Thomas Hobbes who was born in 1588 to a
clergyman in Malmesbury, England. He was a highly educated man in that he
studied at Oxford University and later worked for a wealthy family that allowed
him the opportunity to continue to educate himself and his student by using the
family’s money to get access to books freely and allowed him to connect easily
with other philosophers and scientists, most notably with René Descartes and Francis Bacon (Stewart, 2013).
It is during a decade in exile from
England in France that Hobbes wrote his popular book to date, Leviathan. Leviathan is a dark story
that focuses on Hobbes’ beliefs that man is selfish, materialistic, and without
the help of a single sovereign the world would be in a constant state of war.
Hobbes, similarly to Rousseau, believed that man was originally entirely free
and all of humankind was equal, but that is where the similarities between
Rousseau and Hobbes end. Hobbes was in the belief that without some sort of
government that was more closely aligned to a monarchy rather than a democracy
(though it was more of a middle ground between the two during his time)
(Stewart, 2013), man was unable to function properly because in nature there
were no rules, no contracts outright, and that because there was no definite distinction
between good and evil (it is up to the individual to decide what he decides is
good or evil) that greed can always take over and that “the weakest has
strength enough to kill the strongest” (Hobbes, 1651). This meant that while
you may be the weakest man physically you still have enough strength to instill
fear into your fellow man’s heart and that you can muster up enough strength to
put a dagger into your enemy’s heart while he slept (Friend, 2012).
It is from this that Hobbes argues
we must have a contract with each other that we mutually transfer our natural
rights such. This means that I will give up my natural right to steal your
chickens because you also give up your right to steal mine. This brings forth
the idea that if another man will not “lay down their right, as well as he,
then there is no reason for anyone to divest himself of his… that is the law of
the gospel: Whatsoever you require that others should do to you, that do ye to
them” (Hobbes, 1651). This is what we know today as the Golden Rule, and he
took it rather seriously.
During his time, he believed that it was the work of a single
sovereign to dictate an equal punishment for those who did wrong to another,
similar to an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. He stated that it is the sovereign’s
responsibility to dictate and rule over the “leviathan” that is the state or
commonwealth in order to keep it safe from itself and from others who have
gotten out of hand and broken the contracts we hold (Stewart, 2013).
So how did two philosophers who both believe that all men are
created equal in nature end up with two completely different ideas of what the
social contract theory is and how we need to operate in order to continue to
achieve greatness? A lot of this has to do with how each was brought up, Hobbes
believed that man was evil from the beginning and is good because of the works
of parliaments and others and this is likely because he had access to other
philosophers, books, scientists, and an Oxford education during his formative
years. Rousseau, on the other hand, had a rough childhood in that he was moved
around, had to take jobs in which he worked for little pay and made sacrifices
in order to just survive. He saw first-hand how one man will voluntarily throw
another man’s well-being to ruins without any thought or even any reason.
Their lives are reflected in their works and show what we
already know today in that a lot of what you view is politically correct or how
the government should act or react is based on how you were brought up. The
life of Rousseau was challenging not only from the beginning with his mother’s
death to his father’s abandonment but his own exile and at the end of his life
where he struggled with self-identity, and he wrote about how advancements in
the arts and wealth are what brought the world to lose its own freedom and
corrupt society. On the other hand, you have Hobbes’ life which was a lot
better off than Rousseau’s because of his almost unlimited access to knowledge
and had a more stable livelihood where he argued that it is from the privileges
that come with having advanced as a society we are able to learn to be good
beings and can work toward the good of society without losing our own freedoms.
References
Bertram, C. (2013). Jean Jacques Rousseau. Retrieved from
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy website: http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/rousseau/
Friend, C. (2012). Social Contract Theory. Retrieved from
Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy (IEP) website:
http://www.iep.utm.edu/soc-cont/
Hobbes, T. (1651). The
Leviathan.
Jean-Jacques, R. (1762). The
Social Contract.
Oregon State University Social Sciences Department (OSU).
(2002). Great Philosophers: Thomas Hobbes. Retrieved from Oregon State
University website:
http://oregonstate.edu/instruct/phl201/modules/Philosophers/Hobbes/hobbes.html
Stewart, D. (2013). Thomas Hobbes. Retrieved from Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy website: http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/hobbes/
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