Social contact can refer to: In the sociological hierarchy
leading up to social relations
, an incidental social interaction between individuals. In social networks, a node (representing an individual or organization) to which another node is socially.
A social contract is
an unofficial agreement shared by everyone in a society in which they give up some freedom for security
. … As members of a society, we agree to the social contract — we cooperate with each other and obey society’s laws. We also give up some freedoms, because we want the protection society can offer.
social contract, in political philosophy,
an actual or hypothetical compact, or agreement, between the ruled or between the ruled and their rulers, defining the rights and duties of each
. … They then, by exercising natural reason, formed a society (and a government) by means of a social contract.
Social contract theory says that
people live together in society in accordance with an agreement that establishes moral and political rules of behavior
. Some people believe that if we live according to a social contract, we can live morally by our own choice and not because a divine being requires it.
The relation between natural and legal rights is often a topic of social contract theory. The term takes its name from The Social Contract (French: Du contrat social ou Principes du droit politique), a 1762 book by
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
that discussed this concept.
noun.
the voluntary agreement among individuals by which
, according to any of various theories, as of Hobbes, Locke, or Rousseau, organized society is brought into being and invested with the right to secure mutual protection and welfare or to regulate the relations among its members.
- to respect. to be polite and considerate of.
- encouragement. the action of giving someone support and hope.
- integrity. honesty from within yourself.
- dignity. self-respect; sense of worth.
- leadership. ability to lead or guide.
- communication. …
- to be wise. …
- accountability.
- Connect to values/principles.
- Identify rules needed to run an effective classroom. …
- Ensure that rules are clear and specific.
- Make consequences relate as directly to the rule as possible.
During the antebellum and Civil War periods, social contract theory was used by all sides. Enslavers used it to support states’ rights and succession, Whig party moderates upheld the social contract as
a symbol of continuity in government
, and abolitionists found support in Locke’s theories of natural rights.
He is relying on a social contract
which in almost every other sentence in his speech he pointed out was neither contractual nor social. We have heard a lot about the social contract. And before anybody starts to decry the social contract he had better tell us what he would put in its place.
· The social contract is an implicit agreement among self-interested, rational agents. This seems to imply we have no duties to beings who are not able to participate (even implicitly) in the contract. Examples:
nonhuman animals, those with mental disabilities
.
Specifically for law enforcement, social contract theory is
important to justify the power that law enforcement can exert over the population as a whole
(Evans and MacMillan, 2014). The power imbalance, held by law enforcement, is part of the contract that society has agreed upon in exchange for security.
In simple terms, Locke’s social contract theory says:
government was created through the consent of the people to be ruled by the majority
, “(unless they explicitly agree on some number greater than the majority),” and that every man once they are of age has the right to either continue under the government they were …
Rousseau’s central argument in The Social Contract is
that government attains its right to exist and to govern by “the consent of the governed
.” Today this may not seem too extreme an idea, but it was a radical position when The Social Contract was published.
political philosophy
Government (1690) by Locke and The Social Contract (1762) by
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
(1712–78) proposed justifications of political association grounded in the newer political requirements of the age.
The agreement with which a person enters into civil society
. The contract essentially binds people into a community that exists for mutual preservation. Rousseau believes that only by entering into the social contract can we become fully human. …