The Freedom of Desire: Hegel's Response to Rousseau on the Problem of Civil Society
American Journal of Political Science, Vol. 54, No. 1, Pg. 125-139, 2010.
Jeffrey Church
The ever-growing body of literature on civil society
can benefit from a return to the original theoretical articulation and
defense of the concept in the work of G.W.F. Hegel. Specifically, this
article suggests that Jean-Jacques Rousseau's influential critique of
civil society remains unanswered and argues that Hegel responded with a
sweeping and sympathetic institutional design that remains relevant
today. Hegel agrees with Rousseau that commercial society aggravates
the dissatisfaction of its members, and that educating individual
desire through institutional design is necessary to solve this
difficulty. However, modern states need not adopt Rousseau's extreme
and impracticable solution. Hegel's concrete, market-based associations
of civil society render desires satiable and elevate them to accord
with the common good, while still maintaining the freedom and
distinctness of a pluralistic modern society.
Read the article.