I do think organic chemistry texts assume you start out with notions of molarity, chemical equations, conservation of energy, change of phase, the kinetic theory of temperature, a basic grasp of the periodic table, and as you go deeper into them they might start to expect you to know some quantum mechanics from elsewhere. So if I was teaching a child from scratch, we would certainly need to cover basic chemistry material before opening an organic chemistry textbook. But if you’ve taken a high school chemistry course and want to jump straight in to college-level orgo, you’ll almost certainly be fine (speaking from experience).
I do think organic chemistry texts assume you start out with notions of molarity, chemical equations, conservation of energy, change of phase, the kinetic theory of temperature, a basic grasp of the periodic table, and as you go deeper into them they might start to expect you to know some quantum mechanics from elsewhere. So if I was teaching a child from scratch, we would certainly need to cover basic chemistry material before opening an organic chemistry textbook. But if you’ve taken a high school chemistry course and want to jump straight in to college-level orgo, you’ll almost certainly be fine (speaking from experience).