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Jean-Jacques Rousseau - Wikipedia After some correspondence with Rousseau, which included an eighteen-page letter from Rousseau describing the reasons for his resentment, Hume concluded that Rousseau was losing his mental balance
Jean-Jacques Rousseau | Biography, Education, Philosophy . . . Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Swiss-born philosopher, writer, and political theorist whose treatises and novels inspired the leaders of the French Revolution and the Romantic generation Although he was the least academic of modern philosophers, he was also in many ways the most influential
Jean Jacques Rousseau - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Rousseau’s appreciation of the wonders of nature and his stress on the importance of feeling and emotion made him an important influence on and anticipator of the romantic movement
Jean-Jacques Rousseau - World History Encyclopedia Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778) was a Swiss philosopher whose work both praised and criticised the Enlightenment movement Although a believer in the power of reason, science, and the arts, Rousseau was convinced that a flourishing culture hid a society full of inequalities and injustices
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Jean-Jacques Rousseau was born to Isaac Rousseau and Suzanne Bernard in Geneva on June 28, 1712 His mother died only a few days later on July 7, and his only sibling, an older brother, ran away from home when Rousseau was still a child
Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778) | Towards Emancipation? Rousseau believed that the modern world was morally corrupt as it was driven by competitive and acquisitive egoism He placed the blame of this moral failure solely on the shoulders of men
Rousseau, Jean–Jacques - Encyclopedia. com In 1790 Edmund Burke wrote that Rousseau gave rise to “new and unlooked-for strokes in politics and morals” and declared that “the writings of Rousseau lead directly to shameful evil ”