Human nature can be defined as the fundamental traits that every man has, regardless of the type of culture or society in which he is inserted. In nature, man would be free, virtuous, godly, amoral, without society, without state, without technology, without money and without property. Freedom is the ability to dispose of one's life in accordance with one's instincts, without any limitation beyond that imposed by one's own nature.
In nature there would be no good or bad, for morality is a socially created convention. According to Rousseau, one cannot "confuse the savage man with the men before us." Thus Hobbes's approach, to which man is selfish by nature, would be mistaken for imputing to man something which is actually characteristic of civilization.