Le Motif De Retour À La Nature Chez Rousseau : Le Logocentrisme Dans Le Discours Sur L’origine Et Les Fondements De L’inégalité Parmi Les Hommes
Özet
In conjunction with being a controversial figure, Jean-Jacques Rousseau has
often been a thinker that is difficult to evaluate consistently because, indeed,
Rousseau's texts are often incoherent. This is accentuated by the fact that the
author of these texts does not like systematization. In this paper, however, we
argue that Rousseau's inconsistency is only superficial, and that a deeper
investigation reveals that Rousseau is in fact a consistent writer. The source of
his coherence, we argue, is that Rousseau's texts revolve around a certain
theme: logocentrism. This term, borrowed from Derrida and specifically in its use
in the context of Derrida's Grammatology, describes a typical Western way of
thinking that is intellectually incapable of thinking without determining criteria
such as origin or finally. For Derrida, this logocentrism is also present in all
Rousseauian discourse. We agree with Derrida's claim. But in addition to this, in
our study, since it would be wrong to approach Rousseau's texts uniformly, we
argue that these texts undergo a paradigmatic shift within themselves, each text
replacing a particular paradigm. The specific "paradigm" we have chosen is
Rousseau's Discourse on the Origin of Inequality, published in 1755. This work
is a kind of anthropological/ethnological examination of the pre-civilization
conditions of man. According to Rousseau, civilization brought with it its evils, it
put man in a much more unhappy state of mind, it detached him from his natural
virtues and thus corrupted him. At this point, when we take Rousseau and his
works as a paradigm and logocentrism as a theme, the parallels with a much
larger subject begin to reveal themselves: the myths of paradise. In the myth of
Prometheus and the myth of the Expulsion from Paradise, similar to Rousseau's
descriptions, humanity maintains a happy and fulfilled condition of existence
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before the intervention of a certain "external" element. We argue that these myths
are another parallel for Rousseau, and that the frame of mind that Derrida
identifies with the concept of logocentrism is much more far-reaching and shows
its influence on Rousseau in this way as well. We think that the Discourse on the
Origin of Inequality, which is the subject of our analysis, is a rich and articulate
text that provides enough material for this research. Ultimately, our aim is to
highlight these parallels and prove that Rousseau's supposed inconsistency can
be dispelled by a deeper look.