"THE FIRST GREAT EMOTIONAL PLEA FOR THE EQUALITY OF ALL MEN": RARE FIRST EDITION IN ENGLISH OF ROUSSEAU ON THE SOCIAL CONTRACT, 1764, A MAJOR INFLUENCE ON THE AMERICAN AND FRENCH REVOLUTIONS
ROUSSEAU, Jean Jacques. A Treatise on the Social Compact; Or The Principles of Politic Law. London: T. Becket and P.A. De Hondt, 1764. 12mo (4-1/2 by 7 inches), modern full brown calf, raised bands; pp. (12), 249, (3). Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell box.
First edition in English of Rousseau's landmark work of political and social theory, a work that greatly influenced both the American and French Revolutions. Scarce and desirable.
"The Contrat Social remains Rousseau's greatest work… his fundamental thesis that government depends absolutely on the mandate of the people, and his genuine creative insight into a number of political and economic problems, give his work an indisputable cogency. It had the most profound influence on the political thinking of the generation following its publication. It was, after all, the first great emotional plea for the equality of all men in the state… the Contrat Social came into its own as the bible of the revolutionaries in building their ideal state… it remains a crucial document of egalitarian government" (PMM 207). "He seeks to harmonize the absolute authority of the sovereign with the absolute freedom of the citizen… Rousseau held that, by the social pact, each individual surrendered the whole of his natural rights… and the community formed by this pact necessarily remained sovereign. Sovereignty being inalienable and indivisible, the 'prince,' i.e., the government, could only be a subordinate authority" (Palgrave III:427-28). Translated by W. Kenrick. First published in French in 1762. Three pages of advertisements at rear. Goldsmith 1764. Kress 6226.
Text clean, binding fine. An attractive copy of this landmark of political and social thought.