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Contribution Of Jean Jacques Rousseau

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Jean Jacques Rousseau was a French writer and philosopher of the age of enlightenment in eighteenth century Europe. He was born in Geneva on 1712 and he died in Ermenoville on 1778, his mother died just a few days later after his birth; he left Geneva on impulse in 1728 when he was not yet sixteen, and fled to Annecy, where he met a French Catholic baroness, Françoise-Louise de Warens. Later Mme. De Warens became his lover, but she also provided him with the education of a nobleman by sending him to a good Catholic school, where Rousseau became familiar with Latin and the dramatic arts, in addition to studying Aristotle. During this period, he got money through teaching, secretarial and musical jobs. (Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy [IEP] , n.d).
In 1742, Rousseau went to Paris to be a musician and composer, so he presented his system of numbered musical notation to the academy of sciences but the system was rejected.
In 1750, His first major philosophical work, A Discourse on the Sciences and Arts, was the winner in an essay contest directed by the Academy of Dijon. In this work, Rousseau argues that the corruption of virtue and morality is caused by the progression of the sciences and arts. After this discourse, Rousseau became recognized and famous, and he started working on a second, longer work, The Discourse on the Origin of Inequality. The second discourse was centered on that human beings are basically good by nature, innocent and free but were corrupted by the

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