"General will"
Rousseau believed that human evil was caused by society.
The philosophies inspired the American and French revolutions.
ALL I KNOW IS THAT IM ONE!! (BY THE WAY this is the person who created the question)
Ideas envisioning a society based in freedom and equal laws and opportunities for all were put forward by philosophers such as John Locke and Jean Jacques Rousseau. This inspired French women to demand equal rights, as they did not have the right to work and to read and write.
Jean-Luc Godard, Jean-Pier Melville, François Truffaut, Jean Renoir, Robert Bresson, Henri-George Clouzot.
General will"
Jean-Jacques Rousseau was an influential 18-century French philosopher who wrote The Social Contract.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau wrote, "Man was born free, and he is everywhere in chains." Rousseau was a famous French philosopher and playwright.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau Swiss-French philosopher 1712-1778 Théodore Rousseau French painter 1812-1867 Henri Rousseau French painter 1844-1910
Jean-Jacques Rousseau was an 18th-century philosopher, writer, and composer known for his ideas on society and government. He is most famous for his work "The Social Contract" where he argues for the primacy of individual freedom. Rousseau had a significant influence on the French Revolution and Romanticism.
Jean Jacques Rousseau
Jean Jacques Rousseau
Montesquieu was the French political philosopher who admired the English form of government. He believed in the separation of powers and the importance of checks and balances in a political system, which he observed in the English government.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778 CE) was a Genevan philosopher during the French Revolution. The ideas he promoted were democracy and personal freedom under the law.
thomas paine
Jean Jacques Rousseau
Jean-Jacques Rousseau believed that human beings are inherently good, but society corrupts them. He argued that people are born free and equal, and that society's structures limit their freedom and promote inequality. Rousseau emphasized the importance of human natural goodness and the need for a simpler way of life in harmony with nature.