BlogHide Resteemsrousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"Civilization is a hopeless race to discover remedies for the evils it produces." Rousseaurousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"The world of reality has its limits; the world of imagination is boundless." Jean-Jacques Rousseaurousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"It is too difficult to think nobly when one thinks only of earning a living." **Jean-Jacques Rousseau **rousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains." Jean-Jacques Rousseaurousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"The bounds of human possibility are not as confining as we think they are; they are made to seem to be tight by our weaknesses, our vices, our prejudices that confine them." Jean-Jacques Rousseaurousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"We are born weak, we need strength; helpless, we need aid; foolish,we need reason. All that we lack at birth, all that we need whenwe come to man's estate, is the gift of education." Jean…rousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"Let us conclude that savage man, wandering about in the forests, without industry, without speech, without any fixed residence, an equal stranger to war and every social connection, without…rousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"The continual emotion that is felt in the theater excites us, enervates us, enfeebles us, and makes us less able to resist our passions. And the sterile interest taken in virtue serves only to…rousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"A taste for ostentation is rarely associated in the same souls with a taste for honesty. No, it is not possible that minds degraded by a multitude of futile concerns would ever raise themselves to…rousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"Government in its infancy had no regular and permanent form. For want of a sufficient fund of philosophy and experience, men could see no further than the present inconveniences, and never thought…rousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"The continual emotion that is felt in the theater excites us, enervates us, enfeebles us, and makes us less able to resist our passions. And the sterile interest taken in virtue serves only to…rousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"There are times when I am so unlike myself that I might be taken for someone else of an entirely opposite character." Jean-Jacques Rousseaurousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"Man was born free, and he is everywhere in chains. Those who think themselves the masters of others are indeed greater slaves than they." Jean-Jacques Rousseaurousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"Or, rather, let us be more simple and less vain." Rousseau Jean-Jacquesrousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains." Jean-Jacques Rousseaurousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"In truth, laws are always useful to those with possessions and harmful to those who have nothing; from which it follows that the social state is advantageous to men only when all possess something…rousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"To write a good love letter, you ought to begin without knowing what you mean to say, and to finish without knowing what you have written." Jean Jacques Rosseaurousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"All my misfortunes come of having thought too well of my fellows." Jean-Jacques Rousseaurousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"In fact, the real source of all thosedifferences, is that the savage lives within himself, whereas thecitizen, constantly beside himself, knows only how to live in theopinion of others; insomuch…rousseau (41)in quote • 3 years agoJean Jacques Rousseau Quotes"The continual emotion that is felt in the theater excites us, enervates us, enfeebles us, and makes us less able to resist our passions. And the sterile interest taken in virtue serves only to…