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General will
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=== Criticisms === Early critics of Rousseau included [[Benjamin Constant]] and [[Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel]]. Hegel argued that, because it lacked any grounding in an objective ideal of reason, Rousseau's account of the general will inevitably led to the [[Reign of Terror]]. Constant also blamed Rousseau for the excesses of the French Revolution and rejected the total subordination of the citizen-subjects to the determinations of the general will.<ref>{{cite book |title=Encyclopedia of Political Theory |contribution=General Will |author=Joseph Reisert |editor-first=Mark |editor-last=Bevir |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gryvMfjg-zEC&pg=PA553 |pages=551β553 |year=2010 |publisher=SAGE Publications |isbn=978-1412958653 }}</ref> In 1952 [[Jacob Talmon]] characterized Rousseau's "general will" as leading to a [[totalitarian democracy]], because, Talmon argued, the state subjected its citizens to the supposedly infallible will of the [[tyranny of the majority|majority]]. Another writer of the period, liberal theorist [[Karl Popper]], also interpreted Rousseau in this way, while [[Bertrand Russell]] warned that "the doctrine of general will ... made possible the mystic identification of a leader with its people, which has no need of confirmation by so mundane an apparatus as the ballot box."<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1_tGAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA2 |title=Rousseau's Social Contract: An Introduction |author= David Lay Williams |publisher= Cambridge University Press |year= 2014 |isbn=978-0521124447 |pages=1β2 }}</ref> Other prominent critics include [[Isaiah Berlin]] who argued that Rousseau's association of freedom with obedience to the General Will allowed totalitarian leaders to defend oppression in the name of freedom, and made Rousseau "one of the most sinister and formidable enemies of liberty in the whole history of human thought."<ref>{{cite book |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=dj-bMlq0V5QC&pg=PA61 |title=Isaiah Berlin: Liberty, Pluralism and Liberalism |author= George Crowder |page=61 |publisher=Polity |year= 2004 |isbn=978-0745624778 }}</ref>
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