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  2. Social contract, in political philosophy, an actual or hypothetical compact, or agreement, between the ruled and their rulers, defining the rights and duties of each. The most influential social-contract theorists were the 17th18th century philosophers Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau.

  3. Social contract theory, nearly as old as philosophy itself, is the view that persons’ moral and/or political obligations are dependent upon a contract or agreement among them to form the society in which they live.

  4. The Social Contract | Summary, State of Nature, Discourses,...

    www.britannica.com/topic/The-Social-Contract

    The Social Contract, major work of political philosophy by the Swiss-born French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712–78). Du Contrat social (1762; The Social Contract) is thematically continuous with two earlier treatises by Rousseau: Discours sur les sciences et les arts (1750; A Discourse on.

  5. Social contract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_contract

    In moral and political philosophy, the social contract is an idea, theory or model that usually, although not always, concerns the legitimacy of the authority of the state over the individual. [1] Conceptualized in the Age of Enlightenment, it is a core concept of constitutionalism, while not necessarily convened and written down in a ...

  6. Social Contract Theory - Ethics Unwrapped

    ethicsunwrapped.utexas.edu/glossary/social-contract-theory

    Social contract theory says that people live together in society in accordance with an agreement that establishes moral and political rules of behavior.

  7. Social contract - Rousseau, Theory, Agreement | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/topic/social-contract/The-social-contract-in-Rousseau

    Social contract - Rousseau, Theory, Agreement: Rousseau, in Discours sur l’origine de l’inegalité (1755; Discourse on the Origin of Inequality), held that in the state of nature humans were solitary but also healthy, happy, good, and free.

  8. Contemporary Approaches to the Social Contract

    plato.stanford.edu/entries/contractarianism-contemporary

    The aim of a social contract theory is to show that members of some society have reason to endorse and comply with the fundamental social rules, laws, institutions, and/or principles of that society.

  9. Social Contract - World History Encyclopedia

    www.worldhistory.org/Social_Contract

    The Social Contract is an idea in philosophy that at some real or hypothetical point in the past, humans left the state of nature to join together and form societies by mutually agreeing which rights they would enjoy and how they would be governed.

  10. Hobbes is famous for his early and elaborate development of what has come to be known as “social contract theory”, the method of justifying political principles or arrangements by appeal to the agreement that would be made among suitably situated rational, free, and equal persons.

  11. Rousseau’s Social Contract Theory – Philosophical Thought

    open.library.okstate.edu/introphilosophy/chapter/rousseaus_social_contract-theory

    When the social contract is ratified, the wills of many individuals are incorporated into one, and what emerges, as though by a chemical reaction, is a new collective entity, a republic, in the original Latin sense of the word. It is more than the sum of its parts.