Jean-Jacques Rousseau

What doesn’t kill you makes for a great story – two new memoirs examine the risky side of life

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 23, 2024

She questions whether women like herself – that is, the well-educated, sexually liberated beneficiaries of second-wave feminism – are really better off than their 1940s counterparts.

Key Points: 
  • She questions whether women like herself – that is, the well-educated, sexually liberated beneficiaries of second-wave feminism – are really better off than their 1940s counterparts.
  • But it isn’t quite the avant-garde art crowd looking for anonymous vaginas to cast in their latest 16mm masterpieces either.
  • Reconstructed from the travel diary the author kept at the time, the adventure is everything you could possibly hope for in a road trip – provided you (or your daughter) aren’t the one taking it.
  • Datsun Angel proves the old adage about time and tragedy making for champagne comedy.
  • It self-consciously situates itself as a cross between the substance-induced exuberance of Jack Kerouac and Hunter S. Thompson, and the provincially impassioned politics of Australian novelist Xavier Herbert.
  • For all her progressivism, there is a note of nostalgia ringing through Broinowski’s recollections.
  • Datsun Angel harks back to a looser – dare I say, more enjoyable – university experience.
  • The narrative promises, against well-intentioned assurances to the contrary, that what doesn’t kill you will, at the very least, make for a good story later on.
  • Broinowski goes part way towards acknowledging as much when she ends her postscript with: “If you’re male and reading this, kudos.

Detachment

  • Let me borrow one instead from the middle-aged Elmore Leonard fan whom Gordon encounters in the State Library Victoria early in the book: “dickhead”.
  • Yes, that about captures it: the protagonist of Excitable Boy is an unequivocal, grade-A dickhead.
  • Fortunately for Gordon (and dickheads more generally), the affliction may be chronic, but it need not be terminal.
  • This denotes an overriding structure or cohesion that I felt somewhat lacking from the work as a whole.
  • Detachment characterises much of Gordon’s storytelling as he kicks his younger self around the back alleys of Melbourne like a half-squashed can of Monster Energy Drink.
  • To be honest, I still haven’t made my mind up if Gordon’s aversion to Aristotelian catharsis is one of the book’s virtues or vices.
  • Detail has to be controlled by some overall purpose, and every detail has to be put to work for you.
  • Detail has to be controlled by some overall purpose, and every detail has to be put to work for you.
  • It is often difficult to gauge what overall purpose the details are serving in these essays, beyond fidelity to memory.


Luke Johnson does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Explainer: the philosophy of Jean-Jacques Rousseau is profoundly contemporary

Retrieved on: 
Monday, September 25, 2023

No account of the modern era – not just modern thought – could ignore him.

Key Points: 
  • No account of the modern era – not just modern thought – could ignore him.
  • But like any major thinker, there are risks in summaries – some of which give us clues about Rousseau himself.
  • Although he is known as a social and political philosopher, Rousseau’s creative output does not resemble that of a contemporary “theorist”.
  • These are now conventional tropes, but they were only emerging at the time Rousseau was writing.

Natural or artificial

    • Rousseau had shot to fame a decade earlier, after winning an essay competition advertised in the literary magazine Mercure de France.
    • Where much philosophical discussion had been centred around the distinction between the “natural” and the “supernatural”, Rousseau opposed the natural to the artificial.
    • He argued that what we ordinarily think of as civilisational progress creates – and then aims to satisfy – new and artificial vices, serving our vanity and not our natural needs.
    • In fact, he proposed there were many good reasons to think they were greater in both.
    • Read more:
      Guide to the Classics: Voltaire’s Candide — a darkly satirical tale of human folly in times of crisis

Society and inequality

    • Developing these ideas, in 1754, Rousseau wrote his Discourse on the Origin and Basis of Inequality Among Men.
    • In it, he attempted a thought experiment which imagined what humans may have been like in a “pre-civilisational” state.
    • Rousseau was aware that this act of imagination was speculative and he could not be sure of its results.
    • He held that inequality was artificial.

Education and politics

    • The first was the institution of a new kind of education; the second was reorienting politics towards a new moral foundation.
    • In Émile, or On Education (1862), Rousseau wrote a treatise on education in the form of a bildungsroman – the first and likely the last of its kind.
    • He sought to outline the conditions of a good education, which he thought should be based on lived experience and the development of individual character, not rote learning, mechanical memorisation, or even the reading of books.
    • As for moral education, young people should learn about the consequences of their actions.
    • Rousseau’s terminology has oriented discussions of morality, self-development and politics from the 18th century to the counterculture of the 1960s, the New Age movement of the 1980s, and beyond.

Deism and human nature

    • According to Rousseau, we know what we know of God from Nature and Reason alone.
    • In Rousseau, Judge of Jean-Jacques (1776), Rousseau addresses this question directly, and in typically Rousseauian fashion:
      whence could the painter and apologist of human nature have taken his model, if not from his own heart?
    • He has described this nature just as he felt it within himself.
    • whence could the painter and apologist of human nature have taken his model, if not from his own heart?
    • He has described this nature just as he felt it within himself.

Wonderkind gifting brings "shop local" from across Canada to your doorstep

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, November 18, 2021

As a gifting service, Wonderkind is built on two guiding principles: to champion Canadian female entrepreneurs and to offer an individually curated gifting experience that both enchants the recipient while respecting the environment.

Key Points: 
  • As a gifting service, Wonderkind is built on two guiding principles: to champion Canadian female entrepreneurs and to offer an individually curated gifting experience that both enchants the recipient while respecting the environment.
  • What was initially described as thoughtful gifting, is now simply known as gifting the Wonderkind way.
  • Gifting the Wonderkind way helps connect families, celebrate loved ones, and acknowledge employees or co-workers, says Shawna.
  • After all, gifting is an act of love, and Wonderkind takes pride in helping customers maintain those special bonds with its collection of uniquely crafted gifts.

AM Best’s Annual Europe Insurance Market Briefing to Examine State of Industry; New Scor CEO to Deliver Keynote Address

Retrieved on: 
Friday, October 8, 2021

Laurent Rousseau, the newly appointed chief executive of Scor, will be the keynote speaker at AM Bests annual Europe Insurance Market Briefing and Methodology Review Seminar in London.

Key Points: 
  • Laurent Rousseau, the newly appointed chief executive of Scor, will be the keynote speaker at AM Bests annual Europe Insurance Market Briefing and Methodology Review Seminar in London.
  • This year delegates will also be able to follow the event virtually with an online registration.
  • To register for an in-person or virtual place at the briefing and seminar, or for more information, please visit https://www.ambest.com/conferences/imbeurope2021 .
  • AM Best is a global credit rating agency, news publisher and data analytics provider specializing in the insurance industry.

Media Availability - Canada’s unions respond to Federal Budget 2021

Retrieved on: 
Monday, April 19, 2021

b'OTTAWA, April 19, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- CLC President Hassan Yussuff and CLC Executive Vice-President Larry Rousseau will be available to comment once the federal budget has been tabled on April 19th.

Key Points: 
  • b'OTTAWA, April 19, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- CLC President Hassan Yussuff and CLC Executive Vice-President Larry Rousseau will be available to comment once the federal budget has been tabled on April 19th.
  • Mr. Yussuff will provide comment in English and Mr. Rousseau will provide comment in French.\nCanada\xe2\x80\x99s unions have released their pre-budget submission outlining the top federal budget priorities for workers and their families.\nAmong the top priorities for Canada\xe2\x80\x99s unions are:\nfully containing the public health crisis and implementing national pharmacare;\ninvesting in the care economy; and\ngetting Canadians back to work and fully-employed in safe, decently-paid, productive and sustainable jobs.\nFor more information and to set up an interview, please contact:\n'

Fraser Institute News Release: New book summarizes key ideas of John Locke, which underpin free societies of today

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, March 12, 2020

Published by the Fraser Institute, the book The Essential John Locke (and its accompanying website and animated videos) provides an overview of his key ideas.

Key Points: 
  • Published by the Fraser Institute, the book The Essential John Locke (and its accompanying website and animated videos) provides an overview of his key ideas.
  • In the year following the Glorious Revolution of 1688, Locke published his two most important works in political theory.
  • Lockes writings influenced many thinkers and scholars including Voltaire, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, the Scottish Enlightenment thinkers and the American revolutionaries.
  • At www.essentialjohnlocke.org, you can download the complete book and individual chapters for free.

Raymond James Ltd. Deepens Wealth Management Leadership Team

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, December 3, 2019

TORONTO, Dec. 3, 2019 /CNW/ -Raymond James Ltd., the Canadian arm of North American investment dealer Raymond James Financial, Inc., today announced that effective immediately, the following changes will be made to its Wealth Management leadership team.

Key Points: 
  • TORONTO, Dec. 3, 2019 /CNW/ -Raymond James Ltd., the Canadian arm of North American investment dealer Raymond James Financial, Inc., today announced that effective immediately, the following changes will be made to its Wealth Management leadership team.
  • Richard Rousseau, formerly EVP, Head of Wealth Management is appointed to Vice Chair, Private Client Group, Quebec.
  • Our Wealth Management leadership team is fortunate to continue to benefit from the expertise and experience of Mario and Richard in these key roles."
  • "These appointments help in many ways to deepen our Wealth Management leadership team and I am confident that Sybil and Jamie will build upon the strong foundation already in place," said Allison.

Media advisory - Unions to mark Labour Day by launching electoral campaign for A Fair Canada

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, August 29, 2019

VANCOUVER, British Columbia, Aug. 29, 2019 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- CLC Executive Vice-President Larry Rousseau will be in Vancouver to take part in the Vancouver & District Labour Councils annual Labour Day event.

Key Points: 
  • VANCOUVER, British Columbia, Aug. 29, 2019 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- CLC Executive Vice-President Larry Rousseau will be in Vancouver to take part in the Vancouver & District Labour Councils annual Labour Day event.
  • Rousseau will be available to media to speak about A Fair Canada for Everyone, the CLCs federal election campaign, launching on Labour Day.
  • The full campaign will launch at canadianlabour.ca on Monday, September 2.
  • To arrange an interview on or before Labour Day, please contact: