George Kateb, “Aspects of Rousseau’s Political Thought,” Political Science Quarterly, Vol. 76, No. 4, (1961) pp.519-43.
Excerpt:
In a review of Sir Isaiah Berlin’s Two Concepts of Liberty, which appeared in The Times (London) Literary Supplement, the anonymous writer complained of the “slanders” that have been lavished on the political philosophy of Rousseau. The slanders-and slanders they are-which the writer had in mind have come from those who claim to see in Rousseau’s thought a powerful and also influential defense of totalitarianism. The fashion which makes of Rousseau a totalitarian democrat must, of course, be as modern as the word “totalitarian” itself; and it is J. L. Talmon who has been primarily responsible for this kind of attribution to Rousseau. But there are slanders against Rousseau that go back to an earlier time: the view of Rousseau as a friend of despotism begins with Constant. Later in the century, Taime thought he saw in Rousseau’s writings a repellent theory of collectivism.
Against these charges, as we know, Rousseau has had his defenders, whose strategy has been to try to show that Rousseau is not a collectivist, at all, nor some kind of perverted democrat, but an individualist.6 And it would seem hopeless to expect that the exchange of arguments for and against Rousseau could ever be resolved: truces resulting from fatigue would seem in fact to be the only resolution. However, if the issue could some- how be given a different complexion; if, somehow, it could be shown that both sides are wrong and their battle folly, then perhaps intolerable debate would be quieted, and Rousseau’s thought be allowed a different perspective. Such an enterprise is itself pretentious, but the pretentiousness may be forgiven by the results. In this paper, I will try to show what this enterprise, in its outlines, would be.
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