Categories
Philosophy Political Video Link

Caught in a Web of His Own Loose Language

Critique of Rousseau’s Social Contract, part 14

This week we’re cramming in four chapters, looking at Book 3, Chapters 12-15. Chapters 12, 13, and 14 are all about “How the Sovereign Authority Maintains Itself,” organized much the same way as the three “The People” chapters back in Book 2. However, those three chapters, even all together, are very short and it’s a little surprising to me that Rousseau decided to split them up.

Full show notes here.

In any case, those first three chapters make a few strange and rather self-destructive claims about the need to frequently assemble the whole people. One of the problems with his totalitarian framework is that it assumes more input from the people makes things better, when in fact a frequent assembly of a mob with the power to enact any law by simple majority will mean many laws written in the heat of the moment, and constant changes to how people will have to do business.

It also means people will spend a lot more time thinking about how to rule others, as opposed to being productive and paying attention to the interpersonal connections that are important to them (the voluntary ones)! Even worse, it gives the worst people plenty of opportunities to skim off the top.

Rousseau makes some vague statements about how States should not extend much further than a city, but he doesn’t put any weight behind it, making it a vague recommendation rather than a meaningful rule or argument.

Finally, Rousseau makes some bizarre statements about profit and representation, mis-characterizing both of them and ending up caught in his own web of words. His collection of odd definitions and his inability to write clearly lead to him using “law” in multiple meanings, “strong” in the vaguest sense, and to find commercial “profit” abhorrent while encouraging parasites to gain by government action. He even forgets his old Legislator concept and I try to salvage things, but it’s still extremely confusing.

This video is available on Odysee, YouTube, and BitChute.

Return to the Table of Contents for this series.

Intro quote by Frederic Bastiat, from the 1874 Stirling translation
https://mises.org/mises-daily/law-stirling-translation-1874

Intro music by INPLUSMUSIC, courtesy Pixabay
https://pixabay.com/users/lnplusmusic-47631836/

Thumbnail image uses a photo by Nicole Bomar, courtesy Unsplash
https://unsplash.com/@nicolebomar

Categories
Philosophy Political Video Link

How to Unmask Totalitarians

I hope this conclusion isn’t too obvious.

I was inspired by a few recent episodes of The Path to Liberty and I wanted to distill a short logical argument about State charters (like the Constitution) and their interpretations.

Full write-up here.

Categories
Philosophy Political Video Link

Hope for Good, Suffer the Bad

Critique of Rousseau’s Social Contract, part 13

In this part, we’re covering Book 3, Chapters 9, 10, and 11.

Full show notes here.

Categories
Philosophy Political Video Link

Apologies for Oppression

Critique of Rousseau’s Social Contract, part 12

In this part, we’ll be covering Book 3, chapters 7 and 8. Chapter 7 is a fairly short and straightforward set of definitions marred by Rousseau’s trademark vagueness and pseudo-mathematical gibberish. Chapter 8 is, as best I can tell, a monstrous apology for several of the major problems with colonization.

Get full show notes here.

Categories
Philosophy Political Video Link

A Crooked Numbers Game

Critique of Rousseau’s Social Contract, part 11

This week we’re covering four chapters in Book 3: Chapters 3 through 6. These chapters contain Rousseau’s definitions and thoughts on the differences inherent in governments vis a vis their relative size compared to the citizenry.

Full show notes here.

Categories
Philosophy Political Video Link

Rousseau’s Fuzzy Math of Tyranny

Critique of The Social Contract, part 10

This week we’re covering Book 3, Chapter 2 of “The Social Contract,” titled The Constituent Principle in the Various Forms of Government. Rousseau is leading up to his evaluations of democracy, aristocracy, and monarchy, and in order to do this, he needs to throw up even more weird fuzzy math to justify his ideas.

Full show notes here.

Categories
Political Video Link

The Mad Grab to Voice the General Will

Today I’m putting together some thoughts about the failure of limited government, specifically what happens when an ostensibly Lockean, limited government is converted into an unlimited, Rousseauian framework. It can be hard to see exactly when this happens, but I argue that one of the most obvious signs is when various government officials begin to fight over ultimate authority, which in the Rousseauian framework is a fight over being the mouthpiece of the General Will, something that doesn’t exist in a Lockean framework.

Full show notes here.

Categories
Philosophy Political Video Link

Power from a Phantom

Critique of Rousseau’s Social Contract, part 9

This week, we’re looking at Book 3, Chapter 1: Government in General. In this chapter, Rousseau finally describes what he calls the prince or government, the body that supposedly converts the laws of the Sovereign/general will into meaningful actions/decrees.

Full show notes here.

Categories
Philosophy Political Video Link

Equality, Autarky, and Subterfuge

Critique of Rousseau’s Social Contract, part 8

These last two chapters of Book 2 are called “The Various Systems of Legislation” and “The Division of the Laws.”

Full show notes here.

Categories
Philosophy Political Video Link

“The People”

Rousseau’s Social Contract, part 7

Rousseau spends three chapters talking about the people, and it’s full of weird assertions and odd points that call into question the value of Rousseau’s book as a work of political philosophy.

Full show notes here.