Rousseau's Freedom as Recognition
Author(s)
Perilla, Julian
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To yearn for freedom is to want to be seen by others as someone. Rousseau, I believe, held such a conception of freedom, alongside his intricate theory of human passions. This essay examines how freedom relates to such passions, and in particular, to the Rousseauian notion of amour-propre. Importantly, the aim here is both interpretive and positive. The essay seeks to locate Rousseau within the old republican tradition in a manner that parts ways with most contemporary readings of Rousseau. But, in doing so, it argues that republican freedom essentially involves a particular status and the recognition of such status by others. On this Rousseauian view, one is free to the extent that others see one as a limit to their arbitrary interference and as entitled to interfere with them non-arbitrarily. Finally, republican freedom, so understood, is shown to be essential to meeting the demands of healthy amour-propre, thereby bringing Rousseau's political and psychological theories closer together.
Date issued
2025-06-19Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Linguistics and PhilosophyJournal
European Journal of Philosophy
Publisher
Wiley
Citation
Perilla, J. (2025). Rousseau's Freedom as Recognition. European Journal of Philosophy, e13088.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0966-8373
1468-0378