The Social Contract

The Social Contract

by

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

Sovereignty Term Analysis

Sovereignty refers to a state’s power to govern itself, and this power resides in the part or aspect of the state called the sovereign. According to Rousseau’s theory of the social contract, legitimate sovereignty specifically means “the exercise of the general will” by a legislative assembly made of a state’s citizens, or in other words, the active passage and implementation of laws that advance the common interests of a nation’s people.

Sovereignty Quotes in The Social Contract

The The Social Contract quotes below are all either spoken by Sovereignty or refer to Sovereignty. 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 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:
Book 1, Chapter 8 Quotes

Suppose we draw up a balance sheet, so that the losses and gains may be readily compared. What man loses by the social contract is his natural liberty and the absolute right to anything that tempts him and that he can take; what he gains by the social contract is civil liberty and the legal right of property in what he possesses. If we are to avoid mistakes in weighing the one side against the other, we must clearly distinguish between natural liberty, which has no limit but the physical power of the individual concerned, and civil liberty, which is limited by the general will; and we must distinguish also between possession, which is based only on force or “the right of the first occupant,” and property, which must rest on a legal title.

We might also add that man acquires with civil society, moral freedom, which alone makes man the master of himself; for to be governed by appetite alone is slavery, while obedience to a law one prescribes to oneself is freedom. However, I have already said more than enough on this subject, and the philosophical meaning of the word “freedom” is no part of my subject here.

Related Characters: Jean-Jacques Rousseau (speaker)
Page Number: 65
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 3, Chapter 15 Quotes

The better the state is constituted, the more does public business take precedence over private in the minds of the citizens. There is indeed much less private business, because the sum of the public happiness furnishes a larger proportion of each individual’s happiness, so there remains less for him to seek on his own. In a well-regulated nation, every man hastens to the assemblies; under a bad government, no one wants to take a step to go to them, because no one feels the least interest in what is done there, since it is predictable that the general will will not be dominant, and, in short, because domestic concerns absorb all the individual’s attention. Good laws lead men to make better ones; bad laws lead to worse. As soon as someone says of the business of the state—“What does it matter to me?”—then the state must be reckoned lost.

Related Characters: Jean-Jacques Rousseau (speaker)
Page Number: 140-1
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 3, Chapter 18 Quotes

At the opening of these assemblies, of which the only purpose is the maintenance of the social treaty, two motions should be put, motions which may never be annulled and which must be voted separately:
The first: “Does it please the sovereign to maintain the present form of government?”
The second: “Does it please the people to leave the administration to those at present charged with it?”

Related Characters: Jean-Jacques Rousseau (speaker)
Page Number: 148
Explanation and Analysis:
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Sovereignty Term Timeline in The Social Contract

The timeline below shows where the term Sovereignty appears in The Social Contract. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Book 2, Chapter 1: That Sovereignty is Inalienable
Human Freedom and Society Theme Icon
Sovereignty, Citizenship, and Direct Democracy Theme Icon
...“the common good” (which is simply whatever best serves everyone’s common interests). He notes that sovereignty simply is “the exercise of the general will,” and the sovereign is “a collective being”... (full context)
Book 2, Chapter 2: That Sovereignty is Indivisible
Sovereignty, Citizenship, and Direct Democracy Theme Icon
Government and the Separation of Powers Theme Icon
...a division of the rights and powers to implement the sovereign will, and not of sovereignty itself. Unfortunately, many legal thinkers—like Grotius and his translator, who were both power-hungry and dedicated... (full context)
Book 2, Chapter 4: The Limits of Sovereign Power
Human Freedom and Society Theme Icon
Sovereignty, Citizenship, and Direct Democracy Theme Icon
...themselves [to the sovereign] under 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... (full context)
Book 3, Chapter 13: The Same—Continued
Sovereignty, Citizenship, and Direct Democracy Theme Icon
Government and the Separation of Powers Theme Icon
National Longevity and Moral Virtue Theme Icon
...meet in assemblies.” But when a state is larger than a single town or city, sovereignty can neither be divided among areas, nor “concentrated in” a capital city, because true sovereignty... (full context)
Book 3, Chapter 15: Deputies or Representatives
Human Freedom and Society Theme Icon
Sovereignty, Citizenship, and Direct Democracy Theme Icon
National Longevity and Moral Virtue Theme Icon
...legislature, they put representatives and deputies in their place. But Rousseau considers this incorrect, because sovereignty resides entirely in the general will and so can neither be represented nor alienated. (Of... (full context)