Jean-Jacques Rousseau, who once said, "Rather than being a person full of prejudices, I prefer to be a person full of paradoxes," effectively summed up his life. Leo Damrosh's book of the same name, which tells the story of Rousseau's life, connects the philosopher's experiences and behaviors from a psychological perspective, following in the footsteps of Rousseau's "Confessions." It is one of the clearest and most fluent biographies I have ever read.
Rousseau's life was actually quite tragic. After his mother died in childbirth, he was raised believing that his father and others were responsible for her death. Growing up alone after his father was exiled, the famous philosopher constantly tried to please his father and was overly shy towards strong women, showing how isolated his childhood was. We also see that Rousseau, who liked to be beaten by the women who took care of him, developed views against sexuality and homosexuality after being molested by a black man in a hotel where he was staying.
Despite being extremely hesitant, Rousseau, who could not trust people and looked down on them because of his father, stated that he did not belong to society with his defect schema. His sometimes stealing and leaving all his born children in the orphanage also somewhat summarizes the author's mental state.
Although he had an interest in music, he later turned to literature and seized the opportunity to meet writers such as Voltaire, Diderot, and Hume. His relationships, which started out great but ended badly, were due to Rousseau's paranoid attitude. Nevertheless, because he transferred the events he experienced into his writings, Rousseau's first work, "Julie," which gave birth to romantic literature, was of great significance in the history of literature. His first important philosophical work was the "Discourse," in which, contrary to Hobbes, he claimed that man was not evil by nature but was made evil by society, taking into account the events that led to his suppression, also influenced by his apprenticeship at the time. In fact, with the "Discourse," Rousseau, who connected the cause of society's corruption to science and art, later changed this view to "society." After the first "Discourse," which pointed out how destructive civilization was, Rousseau, who focused on freedom, began to dwell on inequality with the second discourse and changed the fate of the world with the masterpiece "The Social Contract." It should be noted that the author, who presented his thoughts that opened a gap in the management of the state with the work that stated that all individuals are equal and that sovereignty belongs to the people, ignited the French Revolution 30 years later.
In addition to "The Social Contract," which led to his exile from France, it is also beneficial to mention Rousseau's work "Emile." Pushing Locke's views on education a step further, Rousseau, who brought a view that was not afraid of authority from "a respect, a shame," opposed rote knowledge and laid the foundation of deism with thoughts reminiscent of Spinoza. Although he left his own children in the orphanage, writing a book on child education, of course, once again reminds the reader of the author's structure full of contradictions. "Emile," which Rousseau later often expressed his regret for, also presents the modern view of the family based on emotional relationships and an educational system based more on emotions than on reason. And finally, with "Confessions," the famous philosopher, who presented everything, including his shameful moments, in writing, showing us who he was and that people must first know themselves, was a forerunner of the modern autobiography genre and an inspiration to Freud. It is a work that must be read in order to better understand Rousseau, who deeply influenced not only the history of literature but also the fate of the world with his views and works.
05.07.2019
Istanbul, Türkiye
Alp Turgut