Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Theodore Dalrymple on Rousseau

A philosopher for the Facebook generation.

If Jean-Jacques Rousseau weren't long dead, that cut would have been fatal.

Excerpt:
Rousseau was also the unwitting founder of the psychology of the Real Me, that is to say of the inner core of each of us that remains immaculate and without sin, however the external person actually behaves. The inner core, the Real Me, is good; what might be called the Epiphenomenal Me, that is to say the one that loses his temper, tells lies, eats too much, etc, is the result of external influences upon him. In this way a monster of depravity may preserve a high opinion of himself and continue his depravity; nothing he can do can deprive him of the natural goodness first espied by Rousseau.
Interesting piece, brief and informative.

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