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well 98 Corsican affairs 99 The feud at Geneva 102 Rousseau renounces his citizenship 105 The Letters from the Mountain 106 Political side 107 Consequent persecution at Motiers 107 Flight to the isle of St. Peter 108 The fifth of the _Reveries_ 109 Proscription by the government of Berne 116 Rousseau's singular request 116 His renewed flight 117 Persuaded to seek shelter in England 118 CHAPTER III. THE SOCIAL CONTRACT. Rousseau's reaction against perfectibility 119 Abandonment of the position of the Discourses 121 Doubtful idea of equality 121 The Social Contract, a repudiation of the historic method 124 Yet it has glimpses of relativity 127 Influence of Greek examples 129 And of Geneva 131 Impression upon Robespierre and Saint Just 132 Rousseau's scheme implied a small territory 135 Why the Social Contract made fanatics 137 Verbal quality of its propositions 138 The doctrine of public safety 143 The doctrine of the sovereignty of peoples 144 Its early phases 144 Its history in the sixteenth century 146 Hooker and Grotius 148 Locke 149 Hobbes 151 Central propositions of the Social Contract-- 1. Origin of society in compact 154 Different conception held by the Physiocrats 156 2. Sovereignty of the body thus constituted 158 Difference from Hobbes and Locke 159 The root of socialism 160 Republican phraseology 161 3. Attributes of sovereignty 162 4. The law-making power 163 A contemporary illustration 164 Hints of confederation 166 5. Forms of government 168 Criticism on the common division 169 Rousseau's preference for elective aristocracy 172 6. Attitude of the state to religion 173 Rousseau's view, the climax of a reaction 176 Its effect at the French Revolution 179 Its futility 180 Another method of approaching the philosophy of government-- Origin of society not a compact 183 The true reason of the submission of a minority to a majority 184 Rousseau fails to touch actual problems 186 The doctrine of resistance, for instance 188 Historical illustrations 190 Historical effect of the Social Contract in France and Germany 193 Socialist deductions from it 194 CHAPTER IV. EMILIUS. Rousseau touched by the enthusiasm of his time 197 Contemporary excitement as to education, part of the revival of naturalism 199 I.
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