Rousseauian General Will Theory
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A Rousseauian General Will Theory is a political sovereignty theory that locates legitimate authority in the collective will of citizens pursuing common good.
- AKA: General Will Theory, Volonté Générale Theory, Rousseau's Sovereignty Theory, Collective Will Theory.
- Context:
- It can typically distinguish General Will from will of all.
- It can typically require Civic Virtue for identifying common interests.
- It can typically mandate Direct Democracy in small republics.
- It can often reject Representative Government as sovereignty alienation.
- It can often oppose Partial Associations that fragment public unity.
- It can often demand Moral Freedom through self-legislation.
- It can range from being a Democratic Rousseauian General Will Theory to being a Totalitarian Rousseauian General Will Theory, depending on its interpretation.
- It can range from being a Procedural Rousseauian General Will Theory to being a Substantive Rousseauian General Will Theory, depending on its will determination.
- It can range from being a Participatory Rousseauian General Will Theory to being a Vanguardist Rousseauian General Will Theory, depending on its citizen role.
- It can range from being a Communitarian Rousseauian General Will Theory to being an Individualist Rousseauian General Will Theory, depending on its rights balance.
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- Examples:
- Historical General Will Applications, such as:
- French Revolutionary Ideology (1789) invoking popular sovereignty.
- Jacobin Political Theory claiming general will embodiment.
- Swiss Cantonal Democracy practicing citizen assemblys.
- Core General Will Concepts, such as:
- Sovereignty Indivisibility Principle preventing power division.
- Forced to be Free Paradox reconciling liberty and law.
- Civil Religion Concept supporting civic unity.
- Modern General Will Interpretations, such as:
- Deliberative Democracy Theory seeking rational consensus.
- Communitarian Political Philosophy emphasizing shared values.
- ...
- Historical General Will Applications, such as:
- Counter-Examples:
- Liberal Individualism Theory, which prioritizes individual rights.
- Pluralist Democracy Theory, which accepts competing interests.
- Libertarian Political Theory, which rejects collective authority.
- See: Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Social Contract Model, Popular Sovereignty Theory, Direct Democracy, Civic Virtue Theory, Small Republic Ideal, Political Philosophy, French Revolution, Collective Decision Theory.