Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Idealist biographies
- Select bibliography
- A note on the texts
- Evolution and society
- Individualism, collectivism and the general will
- 5 Ideal Morality (1876; revised 1927)
- 6 The Reality of the General Will (1895)
- 7 The Rights of Minorities (1891 and 1893)
- 8 The Dangers of Democracy (1906)
- 9 Individualism and Socialism (1897)
- 10 The Coming of Socialism (1910)
- The State and international relations
- Index
- Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought
6 - The Reality of the General Will (1895)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Idealist biographies
- Select bibliography
- A note on the texts
- Evolution and society
- Individualism, collectivism and the general will
- 5 Ideal Morality (1876; revised 1927)
- 6 The Reality of the General Will (1895)
- 7 The Rights of Minorities (1891 and 1893)
- 8 The Dangers of Democracy (1906)
- 9 Individualism and Socialism (1897)
- 10 The Coming of Socialism (1910)
- The State and international relations
- Index
- Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought
Summary
‘There is often a great difference between the will of all and the general will; the latter looks only to the common interest; the former looks to private interest, and is nothing but a sum of individual wills; but take away from these same wills the plus, and minus, that cancel one another, and there remains, as the sum of the differences, the general will.’ ‘Sovereignty is only the exercise of the general will.’
This celebrated antithesis, the statement of which I have translated from Rousseau's own words, has the effect of setting a problem to which Rousseau himself scarcely finds an answer. The problem is emphasised by the various reasons and indications which make it difficult to believe that the action of any community is a mere sum of the effects of wholly independent causes operating on a number of separate individual minds. No doubt, the action of a community sometimes is, and often appears to be, the sum of effects of such independent causes. One man gives a certain vote because he hates Mr. A.; another man gives the same vote because he thinks Mr. B. will do something for his trade; and a third gives the same vote because of some one out of a thousand possible social reforms which he thinks the man he is voting for will help or will hinder, as the case may be. Now, assuming these causes to be independent of one another, the direction in which they will sum up is a question of chance.
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- The British Idealists , pp. 130 - 141Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997