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Although many commentators on Rousseau’s philosophy have noted its affinities with Platonism and acknowledged the debt that Rousseau himself expressed to Plato on numerous occasions, David Williams is the first to offer a thoroughgoing, systematic examination of this linkage. His contributions to the scholarship on Rousseau in this book are threefold: he enters the debate over whether Rousseau is a Hobbesian (in rejecting transcendent norms) or a Platonist (in accepting them) with a decisive argument supporting the latter position; he tackles from a new angle the ever-challenging question of unity in Rousseau’s thought; and he explores the dynamic metaphor of the chain throughout Rousseau’s writings as a key to understanding them as inspired by Platonism. The book is organized into three main parts. The first sketches the background of Platonism and materialist positivism in modern European metaphysics and political philosophy that provided the context for Rousseau’s intellectual development. The second examines Rousseau’s choice of Platonism over positivism and its consequences for his philosophy generally. The third addresses the legacy of Rousseau’s thought and its appropriation by Kant, Marx, and Foucault, suggesting that in an age where materialism and relativism are rife, Rousseau may have much to teach us about how we view our own society and can engage in constructive critique of it.
David Lay Williams is Associate Professor of Political Science and Philosophy at the University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point.
ContentsForewordList of Frequently Cited WorksPrefaceAcknowledgments1.The Context, Part 1: Metaphysics and Politics in Hobbes and Locke2.The Context, Part 2: Materialism and Platonism in Modern Europe3.Metaphysics and Morality: The Platonism of the Savoyard Vicar4.The General Will: On the Meaning and Priority of Justice in Rousseau5.Of Chains, Caves, and Slaves: Allegory and Illusion in Rousseau6.Rousseau's System of Checks and Balances: The Negative Function of Justice7.Kant's Conceptions of the General Will: The Formalist Interpretation8.The Foucauldian Legacy: Critiques Without Justice?ReferencesIndex
“Rousseau is too often thought to have waved his hands at what successors like Kant and Freud would really grasp. Williams is to be congratulated for following Rousseau’s own lead to Plato, his greatest predecessor. Surprisingly, his Platonic Rousseau, though rooted in the past, proves a greater original and more important guide to our own time than the Rousseaus who gesture toward the future.”—Jonathan Marks, Ursinus College
David Lay Williams, Matthew W. Maguire, Chicago) Williams, David Lay (DePaul University, Chicago) Maguire, Matthew W. (DePaul University, Matthew W Maguire
David Lay Williams, Matthew W. Maguire, Chicago) Williams, David Lay (DePaul University, Chicago) Maguire, Matthew W. (DePaul University, Matthew W Maguire
David Lay Williams, Matthew W. Maguire, Chicago) Williams, David Lay (DePaul University, Chicago) Maguire, Matthew W. (DePaul University, Matthew W Maguire
David Lay Williams, Matthew W. Maguire, Chicago) Williams, David Lay (DePaul University, Chicago) Maguire, Matthew W. (DePaul University, Matthew W Maguire