An idea · Early Modern · first attested 1755
The Noble Savage
Humans are born good. Society corrupts them.
Rousseau (who never used the exact phrase "noble savage") argues, against Hobbes, that humans in a hypothetical state of nature are self-sufficient, decent, free. The vices of civilization — vanity, inequality, cruelty — are products of society, especially of property. The view will color Romanticism, anthropology, and every later critique of modernity.