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Title: |
The Government of Poland |
| Series: |
Hackett Classics |
Search Result:
| By (author): |
Jean-Jacques Rousseau Translated by: Willmoore Kendall |
| ISBN10-13: |
0915145952 : 9780915145959 |
| Format: |
Paperback |
| Size: |
215.9x139.7mm |
| Pages: |
157 |
| Weight: |
.198 Kg. |
| Published: |
Hackett Publishing Company, Inc. - March 1985 |
| List Price: |
13.99 Pounds Sterling |
| Availability: |
In Stock
Qty Available: 6 |
| Subjects: |
Philosophy : History of Western philosophy : Social & political philosophy : Political science & theory : Poland |
"The Government of Poland is the only finished work in which Rousseau himself dons the mantle of legislator, applying the principles of the Social Contract to the real world around him. Poland teaches us much about the mysterious art of the Social Contract's 'legislator,' how he transforms each individual into part of a larger whole. Only in . . . Poland do we find what this crucial transformation entails and what it presupposes. But probably the greatest lesson to be learned from . . . Poland concerns Rousseau's understanding of the proper relationship between theory and practice. . . . Time and again we see Rousseau advising the Poles to do things which are in gross violation of the strict principles of political right he had elaborated in the Social Contract." --Richard Myers in Canadian Journal of Political Science |
| Reviews: |
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The Government of Poland is the only finished work in which Rousseau himself dons the mantle of legislator, applying the principles of the Social Contract to the real world around him. Poland teaches us much about the mysterious art of the Social Contract's 'legislator,' how he transforms each individual into part of a larger whole. Only in . . . Poland do we find what this crucial transformation entails and what it presupposes. But probably the greatest lesson to be learned from . . . Poland concerns Rousseau's understanding of the proper relationship between theory and practice. . . . Time and again we see Rousseau advising the Poles to do things which are in gross violation of the strict principles of political right he had elaborated in the Social Contract. --Richard Myers in Canadian Journal of Political Science
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