Rousseau believed
that contemporary society had a corrupting effect on individuals who were originally born good.
In the Social Contract, the French philosopher argues that nature created
humans free, but that social dynamics created hierarchies which subjugated the weakest:
"l'homme est n© libre et partout il est dans le fers".
Rousseau
wanted to replace this mechanism which favors social relationships based on exploitation with a
new social contract which ensured that every citizen is protected by the community. In
Emile, Rousseau specifically focuses on the importance of education to form
good citizens. The treaty states the inherent goodness of human beings and stresses that the
principles of education should be developed in accordance with nature.
Therefore, Rousseau states that the intellectual education of the child should be
adapted to his/her effective skills at a given age. It should also be organized in such a way as
to make the child the effectiveof his/her own education. For example, until the age of 12,
Rousseau prescribed that educators addressed themselves to the senses and sensory perceptions of
the child.
With this appeal to experience, Rousseau hopes to show that the
child can play an active part in his/her education. Because of his assumption that individuals
are born good and corrupted by civilization, Rousseau argues that education should not alter the
natural/primitive state of the child's character.
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