Section 28
Book 3, Chapter 7: Mixed Governments explained simply
The Social Contract by Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Original excerpt
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Strictly speaking, there is no such thing as a simple government. An isolated ruler must have subordinate magistrates; a popular government must have a head. There is therefore, in the distribution of the executive power, always a gradation from the greater to the lesser number, with the…
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Simple English explanation
Mixed governments combine forms because pure systems often need correction. Rousseau treats institutional balance as a practical safeguard. In simple terms, Rousseau is explaining how a free people can create public rules without turning political power into private domination.
1-minute summary
Mixed governments combine forms because pure systems often need correction. Rousseau treats institutional balance as a practical safeguard.
Key takeaways
- Political authority needs legitimacy, not only power.
- Freedom depends on laws people can recognize as public, not private, will.
- The common good is Rousseau’s test for political order.
- Government is dangerous when it starts serving itself instead of the people.
Modern example
A modern constitution tries to solve the same problem: it must give officials enough power to govern while keeping that power answerable to the public good.
For kids
Rousseau is asking how people can make fair rules together without letting one person boss everyone around.