Natural Right and Political Right: Essays in Honor of Harry V. JaffaThomas B. Silver, Peter W. Schramm |
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Page 130
... Machiavelli , it is not entirely amiss to suggest that , in Rousseau's view , the most corrupt reader Machiavelli ever had was Hobbes . For , although Hobbes apparently accepted the Machiavellian critique of both the classi- cal and ...
... Machiavelli , it is not entirely amiss to suggest that , in Rousseau's view , the most corrupt reader Machiavelli ever had was Hobbes . For , although Hobbes apparently accepted the Machiavellian critique of both the classi- cal and ...
Page 197
... Machiavelli , for according to Machiavelli , inherent in the beginning of Rome were the seeds of Caesarism . The tumults between patrician and pleb were not just " the first cause " of Roman liberty and the ground of Roman greatness ...
... Machiavelli , for according to Machiavelli , inherent in the beginning of Rome were the seeds of Caesarism . The tumults between patrician and pleb were not just " the first cause " of Roman liberty and the ground of Roman greatness ...
Page 220
... Machiavelli postpones his discussion of how loving conquest too much leads to tyranny , but when he does discuss it , Caesar proves to be the principal example . See Disc . , I. 5 , P. 140 ; III . 24 . 22. Consider Disc . , III . 6 , p ...
... Machiavelli postpones his discussion of how loving conquest too much leads to tyranny , but when he does discuss it , Caesar proves to be the principal example . See Disc . , I. 5 , P. 140 ; III . 24 . 22. Consider Disc . , III . 6 , p ...
Contents
Introduction | 3 |
Dante and the Rediscovery of Political Philosophy | 9 |
Jefferson and the Practice of Empire | 27 |
Copyright | |
18 other sections not shown
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