What is pity according to Rousseau

What is pity according to Rousseau

Pity is a natural sentiment, which, by moderating in each individual the activity of the love of oneself, contributes to the mutual preservation of the entire species. (rousseau and cress, 55) this natural right of pity is not a rational one but rather is drawn from the empathy of being able to feel.According to cohen, rousseau's idea of pity is, in fact, perfectible after all:There is a constant theme of nature and even the emotional faculty of pity described in the second discourse.Part of his intellectual legacy was an incisive exploration of the sentiment and its powerful dynamics.So he studied the man in two forms:

Therefore, man is naturally free.Men live in the present, with no notion of future.According to rousseau, there is no such thing as a natural law, all laws are artificial.History is found in nature, not in booksRousseau's sole work on educational theory is his book émile, first published in 1760, which describes the education of a fictitious boy, whose name is the title of the book.

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