6Book II (pt. 2)
66Chapter XVIII. How to Check the Usurpations of Government
7Book II (pt. 3)
67Book IV
8Book III (pt. 1)
68Chapter I. That the General Will is Indestructible
9Book III (pt. 2)
69Chapter II. Voting
10Book IV (pt. 1)
70Chapter III. Elections
11Book IV (pt. 2)
71Chapter IV. The Roman Comitia
12Book IV (pt. 3)
72Chapter V. The Tribunate
13Book IV (pt. 4)
73Chapter VI. The Dictatorship
14Book V (pt. 1)
74Chapter VII. The Censorship
15Book V (pt. 2)
75Chapter VIII. Civil Religion
16Book V (pt. 3)
76Chapter IX. Conclusion
17New Heloise (An Excerpt)
77Discourse on the Origin of Inequality Among Men
18I. "The Course of True Love"
78Dedication to the Republic of Geneva
19II. The Separation
79Preface
20III. The Philosophic Husband
80A Dissertation on the Origin and Foundation of the Inequality of Mankind
21IV. The Veil
81The First Part
22Political Writings
82The Second Part
23Introduction
83Appendix1
24Foreword
84Discourse on the Arts and Sciences
25Book I
85Preface
26Chapter I. Subject of the First Book
86Moral Effects of the Arts and Sciences
27Chapter II. The First Societies
87The First Part
28Chapter III. The Right of the Strongest
88The Second Part
29Chapter IV. Slavery
89A Discourse on Political Economy
30Chapter V. That We Must Always Go Back to a First Convention
90Autobiography
31Chapter VI. The Social Compact
91Introduction by S.W. Orson
32Chapter VII. The Sovereign
92Book I.
33Chapter VIII. The Civil State
93Book II.
34Chapter IX. Real Property
94Book III.
35Book II
95Book IV.
36Chapter I. That Sovereignty is Inalienable
96Book V.
37Chapter II. That Sovereignty is Indivisible
97Book VI.
38Chapter III. Whether the General Will is Fallible
98Book VII. (pt. 1)
39Chapter IV. The Limits of the Sovereign Power
99Book VII. (pt. 2)
40Chapter V. The Right of Life and Death
100Book VIII.
41Chapter VI. Law
101Book IX. (pt. 1)
42Chapter VII. The Legislator
102Book IX. (pt. 2)
43Chapter VIII. The People
103Book X.
44Chapter IX. The People (continued)
104Book XI.
45Chapter X. The People (continued)
105Book XII. (pt. 1)
46Chapter XI. The Various Systems of Legislation
106Book XII. (pt. 2)
47Chapter XII. The Division of the Laws
107Criticism on Rousseau
48Book III
108Rousseau and Romanticism (Irving Babbitt)
49Chapter I. Government in General
109Introduction
50Chapter II. The Constituent Principle in the Various Forms of Government
110Chapter I The Terms Classic and Romantic
51Chapter III. The Division of Governments
111Chapter II Romantic Genius
52Chapter IV. Democracy
112Chapter III Romantic Imagination
53Chapter V. Aristocracy
113Chapter IV Romantic Morality: The Ideal
54Chapter VI. Monarchy
114Chapter V Romantic Morality: The Real
55Chapter VII. Mixed Governments
115Chapter VI Romantic Love
56Chapter VIII. That All Forms of Government Do Not Suit All Countries
116Chapter VII Romantic Irony
57Chapter IX. The Marks of a Good Government
117Chapter VIII Romanticism and Nature
58Chapter X. The Abuse of Government and Its Tendency to Degenerate
118Chapter IX Romantic Melancholy
59Chapter XI. The Death of the Body Politic
119Chapter X The Present Outlook
60Chapter XII. How the Sovereign Authority Maintains Itself
120Appendix Chinese Primitivism