| http://www.w3.org/ns/prov#value | - Hobbes famously wrote that life for natural man was nasty, brutish and short, for man was a monster who could only be tamed by civil society.Rousseau, meanwhile, saw natural man as more childlike, although not necessarily innately good, and civil society as a restrictive force, an idea summed up in the 1762 treatise The Social Contract's opening line, Man was born free, and he is everywhere in
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