who implement the social rule
Answers
Explanation:
provide one of many perspectives. Some political philosophers imagined humans to be in a state of nature prior to the formation of society. There are many thoughts about what state of nature is like but basically humans have unfettered free will to do what they want. The life in a state of nature is also short, brutish and rough.
Next up, forming a society. Basically people give up some of their individual freedom for group benefits; such as losing the right to kill but gaining the right not to be killed or losing the right to steal and gaining the right to claim possession of whatever. These would be what the political philosophers like Hume, Locke or Rousseau would deem as the starting point or motivation for society formation. These, would also be the social rules you are talking about. Social rules represent the relationship between the community and the individual, also spelling out the compromises individuals make for community’s benefits which would in turn benefit the individuals.
As societies progress, from hunter-gatherer to agrarian to feudal to industrial to present times, things got more and more complex and these social rules also got more complex to keep up. Today, social rules protect not just the fundamental rights mentioned before but also rules to keep the community stable and protect psychological damages to others and rules to protect new institutions such as the stock exchange or what teachers could do or not do; note that teachers didn’t exist as a formal position in the earliest societies.
Long story short, social rules balance the individual and community so being in a community makes sense. Then of course, there are entities to enforce these rules, both formal and informal entities. If you wanna know more, here’s some relevant concepts.