Author: Jean Jacques Rousseau
Links:
-WIKIPEDIA: Jean Jacques Rousseau -Jean-Jacques Rousseau | Philosopher (Lucid Cafe) -WIKIPEDIA: Reveries of the Solitary Walker -ETEXT: The Reveries of the Solitary Walker (an anonymous translation to English, published in 1796) (Project Gutenberg) -ENTRY: The Reveries of a Solitary Walker work by Rousseau (Encyclopaedia Britannica) -BOOK SITE: The Life of Wisdom in Rousseau's "Reveries of the Solitary Walker" by Thomas Pangle (Cornell University Press) -ETEXT: THE SOCIAL CONTRACT OR PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL RIGHT by Jean Jacques Rousseau (1762) Translated by G. D. H. Cole -ONLINE STUDY GUIDE: The Social Contract (Spark Notes) -EXCERPTS: from The Social Contract (Modern History Sourcebook) -CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: The Social Contract -ESSAY: Settling accounts: Before he was famous, Jean-Jacques Rousseau was Louise Dupin’s scribe. It’s her ideas on inequality that fill his writings (Sam Dresser, November 2024, Aeon) -ESSAY: Rambling Reflections On Summers in Switzerland and Sheffield: In the footsteps of Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Karl Philipp Moritz — from the peace of Lake Biel to the rugged Peaks — Seán Williams considers the connection between walking and writing. (Sean Williams, December 11, 2018, Public Domain Review) -ESSAY: The Little-Mentioned Ignoble Savage (Roslyn Ross, 1st August 2022, Quadrant) -ESSAY: Three General Wills in Rousseau (Jason S. Canon, 6/06/22, Review of Politics) -ESSAY: The Myth Of The Noble Savage: The figure of the “Noble Savage” has long served as an icon for humanity’s potential to co-exist with nature. But is it true? (TRISTAN SØBYE RAPP, JULY 9, 2024, Noema) -ESSAY: Rousseau & the origins of liberalism (Roger Scruton, October 1998, New Criterion) -ESSAY: Reading Rousseau: The Social Contract, Part I (Paul Krause, December 15, 2023, Minerva Wisdom) -ESSAY: Rousseau explained: What his philosophy means for us today: Jean-Jacques Rousseau was a Swiss Enlightenment philosopher who praised a simple life and inspired the worst of the French Revolution. (Scotty Hendricks, 7/26/22, Big Think) -ESSAY: Rousseau's "Social Contract": A Critical Response (Bobby Taylor, Liberty Haven) -ESSAY : The Only Honest Man: Jean-Jacques Rousseau, impresario of modernity. (Alan Jacobs, Books and Culture) -ESSAY: Rousseau explained: What his philosophy means for us: The philosopher who praised a simple life and inspired the worst of the French Revolution. (SCOTTY HENDRICKS, 18 February, 2021, Big Think: Rightly Understood) -PODCAST: a conversation with Thomas Pangle about his recent book, The Life of Wisdom in Rousseau's Reveries of the Solitary Walker (The Political Theory Review) -PODCAST: Rousseau, Reveries of the Solitary Walker (Ellie Anderson and David Peña-Guzmán, Overthink Podcast) -ESSAY: An Exploration into the Reveries of Rousseau (Samira Ahansaz, Mahdi Afkhaminia, Mustafa Ahansaz, International Journal of Applied Linguistics and English Literature) -ESSAY: Reverie and the Return to Nature: Rousseau's Experience of Convergence (Joseph H. Lane, Jr., Summer 2006, The Review of Politics) -REVIEW ESSAY: What Rousseau Knew about Solitude (Gavin McCrea April 27, 2020, Paris Review) -REVIEW: of Reveries of the Solitary Walker by Jean-Jacques Rousseau (David Bahr, Forbes) -REVIEW: of Reveries (Doug Walker, College of Charleston) -REVIEW: of Reveries (Culturium) -REVIEW: of Reveries (Hermitary) -REVIEW: of Reveries (Victor Gourevitch, The Review of Politics) -REVIEW: of Reveries (PD Smith, The Guardian) -REVIEW: of Reveries (Millard Stahle, Claremont Review of Books) -REVIEW: of Reveries (Seán Williams, Public Domain Reviews) -REVIEW: of -REVIEW: of John C. O’Neal, ed., The Nature of Rousseau’s “Rêveries”: Physical, Human, Aesthetic. Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century (Charly Coleman, H-France Review) -REVIEW: of John C. O’Neal, ed. The Nature of Rousseau’s “Rêveries”: Physical, Human, Aesthetic (Catriona Seth, Eighteenth Century Fiction) -REVIEW: of Heinrich Meier, On the Happiness of the Philosophic Life: Reflections on Rousseau's Rêveries, Robert Berman (tr.) Ryan Patrick Hanley, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews) -ESSAY: Did the Enlightenment fail?: The Enlightenment was born out of the bloody conflicts of the 17th and 18th centuries and dedicated to tolerance and moderation. The violence of the French Revolution appeared to mark its failure. (Angus Brown, 4/16/24, Englesberg Ideas) -REVIEW: of Review: Waller Newell’s “Tyranny and Revolution: Rousseau to Heidegger” (Paul Krause, Merion West) -REVIEW: of Tyranny and Revolution: Rousseau to Heidegger (John Boersma, Voegelin View) - The Social Contract (1762) - Jean Jacques Rousseau (6/28/1712
-7/02/1778) (Grade:F) Reveries of the Solitary Walker (1778) - Jean Jacques Rousseau (6/28/1712
-7/02/1778) (Grade:F) |
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