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Jean Jacques Rousseau Influence The French Revolution

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Influencing the French Revolution with his political philosophies, Jean-Jacques Rousseau was truly revolutionary in discerning the underlying principles that govern society. Among many concepts in his magnum opus, The Social Contract, are the two intricately related ideas of property and strength. While important in deciphering connections within a society, the application of these ideas is radically different when taken outside the confines of a single nation. By observing the relationship between the United States and the Native Americans, I find Rousseau’s ideas of property and the “right of the strongest” to be inapplicable between nations. Before relating Rousseau’s ideas of property and strength to past affairs of the U.S. and Native …show more content…

Take for example, a piece of land that a man considers his. Assuming that he was the first person to claim the land, the man would own it through Rousseau’s idea of the “right of the first occupant” which is characterized by three conditions: that there are no previous claims to the land, that he takes only what he needs, and that he utilizes the land (Rousseau 66). Ownership is gained once those conditions are met. However, he maintains the right to the land simply through his own strength. It is at this crucial point that the “public possession” comes into play along with the “right of the …show more content…

effectively took the Native American’s land and forcibly moved them onto the Indian Reservations of today. The Native Americans, a nation with their own “public possession” as well entitlement to the “right of the first occupant,” lost their land rights because they were conquered by the United States. How is it possible that the United States managed to take the land merely with the “right of the strongest,” which, Rousseau said, is less real than the “right of the first occupant” when combined with the institution of

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