Jacob Leib Talmon was born on 14 June 1916 in
Rypin, a town in central Poland, into an
Orthodox Jewish family. He left in 1934 to study at the Hebrew University in
Jerusalem, then in the
British Mandate of Palestine, now
Israel. He continued his studies in France but left for London after the Nazi invasion; in 1943 he was awarded a
PhD from the
London School of Economics. His main works are
The Origins of Totalitarian Democracy and
Political Messianism: The Romantic Phase. Talmon argued that
Rousseau's position may best be understood as "totalitarian democracy", a philosophy in which liberty is realized "only in the pursuit and attainment of an absolute collective purpose." Following the
1967 Six-Day War, Talmon engaged in a debate with
Arnold J. Toynbee on the role of Jews and Zionism in history. Talmon died in
Jerusalem on June 16, 1980, two days after his 64th birthday. ==Awards==