“Meier is deeply impressive in his mastery of Rousseau’s oeuvre. With On the Happiness of the Philosophic Life, he presents a startlingly original interpretation of one of Rousseau’s most beautiful and elusive works—the Reveries. His interpretation is sure to be controversial, but it is presented with an elegance, intensity, and thoroughness that will command the attention of all serious Rousseau scholars and those broadly interested in the history of political philosophy.”
— Susan Meld Shell, Boston College
“No one before Meier has described Rousseau’s philosophic ‘revolution’ with more plausibility and subtlety; his book sets a standard hardly surpassable over the long-term.”
— Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, praise for the German edition
“[A] dense but precise and enthralling analysis.”.
— New Yorker
“Meier has written a remarkable work that, I believe, will stand the test of time, not only for its careful study of the Reveries and the Profession, but also as a work that deserves careful study itself.”
— Interpretation: A Journal of Political Philosophy
“Readers of Rousseau and students of philosophy and of the philosophic life more generally owe Meier a considerable debt of gratitude for his deeply probing and illuminating work. . . . Meier, a reader with an eye to the exquisite and playful and even numerical artistry of philosophers, also practices a bit of such artistry himself. How much is ‘a bit?' Let the question serve as an inducement for the reader to take up this superb book in the same admirable spirit in which it is written.”
— History of Political Thought
“The most ambitious and searching study of Rousseau’s thought."
— Victor Gourevitch