The Social Contract

The Social Contract

by

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

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A covenant is a legal agreement, association, or contract (including the social contract).

Covenant Quotes in The Social Contract

The The Social Contract quotes below are all either spoken by Covenant or refer to Covenant. For each quote, you can also see the other terms and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Human Freedom and Society Theme Icon
).
Book 1, Chapter 4 Quotes

Since no man has any natural authority over his fellows, and since force alone bestows no right, all legitimate authority among men must be based on covenants.

Related Characters: Jean-Jacques Rousseau (speaker)
Page Number: 53
Explanation and Analysis:

To renounce freedom is to renounce one’s humanity, one’s rights as a man and equally one’s duties. There is no possible quid pro quo for one who renounces everything; indeed such renunciation is contrary to man’s very nature; for if you take away all freedom of the will, you strip a man’s actions of all moral significance. Finally, any covenant which stipulated absolute dominion for one party and absolute obedience for the other would be illogical and nugatory. Is it not evident that he who is entitled to demand everything owes nothing? And does not the single fact of there being no reciprocity, no mutual obligation, nullify the act? For what right can my slave have against me? If everything he has belongs to me, his right is my right, and it would be nonsense to speak of my having a right against myself.

Related Characters: Jean-Jacques Rousseau (speaker), Hugo Grotius, Thomas Hobbes
Page Number: 55
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 1, Chapter 7 Quotes

The act of association consists of a reciprocal commitment between society and the individual, so that each person, in making a contract, as it were, with himself, finds himself doubly committed, first, as a member of the sovereign body in relation to individuals, and secondly as a member of the state in relation to the sovereign. Here there can be no invoking the principle of civil law which says that no man is bound by a contract with himself, for there is a great difference between having an obligation to oneself and having an obligation to something of which one is a member.

Related Characters: Jean-Jacques Rousseau (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Human Body and the Body Politic
Page Number: 62
Explanation and Analysis:
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Covenant Term Timeline in The Social Contract

The timeline below shows where the term Covenant appears in The Social Contract. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Book 1, Chapter 4: Slavery
Human Freedom and Society Theme Icon
...does not make right,” Rousseau continues, “all legitimate authority among men must be based on covenants.” While Grotius might be right that people sometimes accept slavery in exchange for having their... (full context)
Book 1, Chapter 9: Of Property
Human Freedom and Society Theme Icon
Sovereignty, Citizenship, and Direct Democracy Theme Icon
...people may be naturally “unequal in strength and intelligence,” society makes them socially “equal by covenant and by right.” (full context)
Book 2, Chapter 4: The Limits of Sovereign Power
Human Freedom and Society Theme Icon
Sovereignty, Citizenship, and Direct Democracy Theme Icon
...the same conditions and must all enjoy the same rights.” Sovereignty, then, “is not a covenant between a superior and inferior,” but rather one “of the body with each of its... (full context)
Book 2, Chapter 5: The Right of Life and Death
Human Freedom and Society Theme Icon
Sovereignty, Citizenship, and Direct Democracy Theme Icon
...being murdered for an agreement “to die if one becomes a murderer.” Lawbreakers violate the covenant of their citizenship and effectively declare war on the state, becoming its “enemy.” Therefore, criminals... (full context)