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The Social Contract: COPYRIGHT

The Social Contract
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table of contents
  1. COPYRIGHT
  2. HOW TO READ THE TEXT
  3. Glossary
  4. BOOK 1
    1. 1. The subject of the first book
    2. 2. The first societies
    3. 3. The right of the strongest
    4. 4. Slavery
    5. 5. We must always go back to a first agreement
    6. 6. The social compact
    7. 7. The sovereign
    8. 8. The civil state
    9. 9. Real estate
  5. BOOK 2
    1. 1. Sovereignty is inalienable
    2. 2. Sovereignty is indivisible
    3. 3. Can the general will be wrong?
    4. 4. The limits of the sovereign power
    5. 5. The right of life and death
    6. 6. The law
    7. 7. The law-maker
    8. 8. The people
    9. 9. The people (continued)
    10. 10. The people (further continued)
    11. 11. Differences among systems of legislation
    12. 12. Classifying laws
  6. BOOK 3
    1. 1. Government in general
    2. 2. The source of the variety among forms of government
    3. 3. Classifying governments
    4. 4. Democracy
    5. 5. Aristocracy
    6. 6. Monarchy
    7. 7. Mixed governments
    8. 8. No one form of government suits all countries
    9. 9. The signs of a good government
    10. 10. How government is abused. Its tendency to degenerate
    11. 11. The death of the body politic
    12. 12. How the sovereign authority is maintained
    13. 13. How the sovereign authority is maintained (continued)
    14. 14. How the sovereign authority is maintained (continued)
    15. 15. Deputies or representatives
    16. 16. What establishes government isn’t a contract
    17. 17. What does establish government
    18. 18. How to protect the government from being taken over
  7. BOOK 4
    1. 1. The general will is indestructible
    2. 2. Voting
    3. 3. Elections
    4. 4. The comitia in ancient Rome
    5. 5. Tribunes
    6. 6. Dictatorship
    7. 7. Censorship
    8. 8. Civic religion
    9. 9. Conclusion

COPYRIGHT

The Social Contract

© Jonathan Bennett, 2017. All rights reserved.  



Early Modern Texts

First launched: December 2010

Contact: earlymodern31@gmail.com

www.earlymoderntexts.com

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