Human and civic rights

Sources

Historical backround: The Enlightenment

- Backround:
* a spirit of the Renaissance and the Scientific Revolution
* an increasing dissatisfaction with the existing social and political system (Absolutism, inequality between social groups/ orders, a lack of political rights of the 'bourgeoisie', censorship, a powerful role of the church on society)
* a new secular public sphere (printed publications, salons, scientific academies)
* in England the press was free (which gave a possibility to bypass the censorship of France by printing critical texts in Britain and deliver them to the French public as fliers)

- John Locke (1632 - 1704)
* the right to govern derives from the consent of the governed and is a form of contract -> a 'Social Contract'
* if government attempts to rule absolutely and arbitrarily it reneges on its contract and forfeits te loyalty of its subjects -> it can be legitimately overthrow
* a constitutional government (monarchy) is the best defense of property and individual rights

- Montesquieu (1689 - 1755)
* supporter of constitutional monarchy
* the division of government into three branches (on his book "The Spirit of Laws", orig. in French: "De l'esprit des loix", 1748):
1) legislative power
2) executive power
3) judicial power (independent courts)

- Voltaire (1694 - 1778)
* his writings constituted a radical attack on French society and the church (especially the clergy)
* a practical reformer who campaigned for free press, religious toleration, humane treatment of criminals etc.
* supporter of enlightened (or benevolent) absolutism

- Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712 - 1778)
* his political ideal was an Athenian like direct democracy (vs representative democracy)
* the 'Social Contract': a state should be based on the 'General Will' (that which is best for the community; which expresses its common interests) -> the citizens themselves must constitute the law-making body (vs absolutistic and aristocratian power)
* human is good by nature but (evil) society corrupts him ( > "Back to nature!")

- the 'Encyclopedie'
* a general encyclopedia published in France between 1751 - 1772
* about 30 volumes, more than 70 000 articles and almost 150 authors ('encyclopedistes')
* its aim was to "change the common way of thinking" through the expansion of knowledge and the development of critical modes of thought

- Immanuel Kant (1724 - 1804)
* on his essay "What is Enlightenment?" (orig. in German: "Was ist Aufklärung?", 1784) he summarised a motto of the Enlightenment:
"DARE TO KNOW! (Sapere aude.) Have a courage to use your own understanding."

TASK: Compare and contrast political ideas of a) Locke, b) Montesquieu, c) Voltaire and d) Rousseau.

A Salon scene: Reading of Voltaire’s L’Orphelin de la Chine (a tragedy about Ghengis Khan and his sons, published in 1755), in the salon of Madame Geoffrin (Malmaison, 1812).