Abstract
The general thesis of this small, well written, but somewhat austere, volume is that Rousseau’s concept of the state of nature is the core of his theoretical teaching. While this is not a particularly surprising thesis, Plattner does show the extent to which Rousseau radicalized the notion of the state of nature. Since Hobbes it had been almost impossible to begin a political discourse without reference to the state of nature as the point of departure. Rousseau, in effect, destroyed this tradition by arguing that history rather than nature provided the true point of departure, and that natural right or natural law consequently provided no ground for political obligation.