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    In civil society, citizens obey laws they have prescribed... — Carmelics
    Home/Democracy & Governance
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    Supports→In civil society, the citizen achieves moral freedom.

    In civil society, citizens obey laws they have prescribed to themselves through the general will.

    Democracy & GovernanceSocial Contract
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    Democracy & GovernanceSocial Contract

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    Rights & Liberty1 linked

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    In civil society, the citizen achieves moral freedom.Moral freedom is obedience to a law that one has prescribed to oneself.

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    In civil society, the citizen achieves moral freedom.82%Rousseau's claim that citizens obey only themselves when obeying the g...79%Selfish citizens who can will the general will might still not be move...77%Tacit consent to a government creates an obligation to obey the laws o...77%

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    SEP: rousseau
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    Rousseau makes a further claim in the same chapter of The Social Contract, namely that in conditions of civil society the citizen achieves “moral freedom,” by which he means obedience to a law that one has prescribed to oneself (for discussion see especially Neuhouser 1993). Although this latter claim is presented almost as an afterthought, it is the form of freedom most directly responsive to the challenge Rousseau had set for himself two chapters earlier, which involved finding “a form of asso

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