Jean-Jacques Rousseau > Related Articles
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- (Thomas) Robert Malthus [r]: British economist (1766-1834) who warned about the dangers of population growth. [e]
- Albert Gallatin [r]: 1761-1849, Swiss born American statesman and anthropologist [e]
- Anthropology [r]: The holistic study of humankind; from the Greek words anthropos ("human") and logia ("study"). [e]
- Botany [r]: The study of plants, algae and fungi (mycology). [e]
- Catalog of political philosophers [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Denis Diderot [r]: Enlightenment philosophe and Editor in Chief of the Encyclopédie. [e]
- Ecological Indian [r]: Add brief definition or description
- France, history [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel [r]: (1770–1831) German idealist philosopher, most famous for writings on Geist and dialectic. [e]
- Government [r]: System by which a community or nation is controlled and regulated. [e]
- Law [r]: Body of rules of conduct of binding legal force and effect, prescribed, recognized, and enforced by a controlling authority. [e]
- Liberalism [r]: Economic and political doctrine advocating free enterprise, free competition and free will. [e]
- Marxist Socialism [r]: Refers to a Marxian school of economics which emerged soon after Marx's death, led by his companions and co-writers, Friedrich Engels and Karl Kautsky. [e]
- Maximilien Robespierre [r]: (6 May 1758 – 28 July 1794) One of the most famous (or infamous, depending on perspective) leaders of the French Revolution. [e]
- Noah Webster [r]: (1758-1843) US lexicographer who compiled the American Dictionary of the English Language and wrote a widely used Speller for use in schools in the teaching of reading and writing. [e]
- Paris [r]: Capital of France, population about 2,200,000. [e]
- Philosophes [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Philosophy [r]: The study of the meaning and justification of beliefs about the most general, or universal, aspects of things. [e]
- Plutarch [r]: (c. 46 – 120) Greek historian, biographer, essayist, and Middle Platonist known primarily for his Parallel Lives and Moralia. [e]
- Political philosophy [r]: Branch of philosophy that deals with fundamental questions about politics. [e]
- Politics [r]: Activity that relates to the way in which society is governed, and the process by which human beings living in communities make decisions and establish obligatory values for its members (although more widely it can also refer to processes concerning the exercise of influence, status or power in government decision-making). [e]
- Republicanism, U.S. [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Republicanism [r]: The political ideology of a nation as a republic, with an emphasis on liberty, rule by the people, and the civic virtue practiced by citizens. [e]
- Social contract [r]: Agreement among the members of an organized society or between the governed and the government defining and limiting the rights and duties of each. [e]
- The Enlightenment [r]: An 18th-century movement in Western philosophy and intellectual life generally, that emphasized the power or reason and science to understand and reform the world. [e]

