Data di Pubblicazione:
2012
Abstract:
The aim of this paper is to show the originality of Rousseau’s conception of modesty (pudeur) when
compared to the eighteenth-Century debate, in which two sharply contrasting explanations for this feeling
were opposed. Some thinkers considered modesty as a natural and original inclination, while others as a
conventional product of social institutions. On a superficial reading of his work (especially as far as the
Lettre à d’Alembert is concerned), Rousseau seems clearly to embrace the first hypothesis; nevertheless, a
deeper analysis of his conception reveals its complexity. For Rousseau, modesty cannot be trivially traced
back to a “first” (original but pre-moral) naturalness; rather, it must be brought back to a “second”
naturalness, which arises from the dynamics of the social “supplement”. In this perspective, modesty can be
good (moral and social) or bad (moral and conventional); for this reason the study of its bon usage will be
placed at the center of Rousseau’s moral reflection on woman.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Elenco autori:
Marco Menin
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