Proficient Grammar in This Book
Jean Jacques Rousseau had a preference for 'one way or again another'.
There are a great many such s.
At the beginning he asserted that general will is all that laws and governments focus on while a particular will goes contrarily to the general one.
He took a few examples to illustrate his general-versus-particular-will viewpoint. Most of them involve compound sentences which you find reluctant to comprehend. His work is undoubtedly philosophical. At the same time it will cost an English learner who is excellent at grammar to grasp what Jean Rousseau was trying to prove.
Like the General and Special Relativities by Albert Einstein I don't think Jean Rousseau carried out his research in a laboratory. They both just got a pen and pieces of draft paper and ended up with a masterpiece in their fields.
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