Machiavellis

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    Machiavelli and Shakespeare reveal similar underlying views on authority and leadership however they provide different perspectives due to their form, context and purpose. Niccolo Machiavelli’s laudatory treatise The Prince (1515) was written in a turbulent Renaissance Italy after the return of the De’ Medici’s as an attempt to regain political power. Machiavelli reveals his perspective on authority and leadership by advocating the appearance of virtue and necessary cruelty as a means of maintaining

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    Every leader has the desire to make their nation stronger, but how can that be done? A political writer from Italy, named Niccolò Machiavelli, shared the qualities that he believed a strong leader should have in order to run a successful government in a piece of writing called The Prince. In this book, Machiavelli lists the main ideas or rules that a leader should follow in order to maintain his principality or government. For centuries, governments have been influenced by the political views that

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    Machiavelli ties virtue very closely to that of prudence. He defines virtue as acting exceptionally and draws a distinction between morality and virtue. In many respects Machiavelli defines virtue by prudence. If a ruler is able to balance his violence, keep his subjects appeased, and have a dire understanding of his threats, then in Machiavelli's

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    The works of Machiavelli and Hobbes have recurrently been cited in modern political theory as sources of contemporary governance and politics. There are many inscriptions within modern politics and international relations today to both philosophers, even with the differences in their philosophies. Machiavelli and Hobbes differ in their purpose of government, as the former saw government as a way of providing protection to the people in an anticipation of war, while the latter saw government as a

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    More Vs Machiavelli

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    Machiavelli and More might have different views on what two different worlds are but they are both equivalent and exotic in so many ways. Machiavelli and More in the two books, The Prince and Utopia, they both talk about their concepts and ideas on human nature and society, how it's organized and how its supposed to be ruled, and lastly their ideas on the role of armies and how wars should be. Their ideas may be different and similar from each other, but they both have amazing and smart minds in

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    military strength and unpredictable in his ruling decisions. Niccolo Machiavelli is writing The Prince with the purpose to focus on practical advice and not to encourage obedience to perfect or extreme ideals. Rulers should focus on gaining or protecting power and not worry about the gaps between what actually works and what is the religious way of virtue. The concern is not on being guided by ethics but on winning. Machiavelli believes that human nature is a mixture of both good and evil, but political

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    highest achievement of man, a progressive and elaborate creation of his free will. The individual, the leader, the people, cooperate in maintaining it.” This idea of state was put forth by Niccolo Machiavelli in The Prince, which was in essence a ruler’s handbook to governing and maintaining his land. Machiavelli conjured his theories for government by basing his ideas in his belief that men, especially men in power, tend to follow the same directions, and therefore by looking at past leaders and their

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    was incorrectly named, as was more so a Reconstruction. Most of Machiavelli’s ideas branch from those of Aristotle. Machiavelli supports the idea that rulers are to say one thing and do another, as well as, that republics should be versatile and adapt with the times. Lastly, Machiavelli states, “One cannot have all the good qualities I have listed and none of the bad ones, (Machiavelli, The Prince: Chapter 15)”. This is a reiteration of Aristotle’s outline of the good. Aristotle believed that the good

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    In the novel The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli, Machiavelli institutes into the readers mind the demeanor and characteristics that a prince should possess. The novel discusses human nature regarding governments and principalities of the modern and ancient society. Machiavelli views toward human nature is revealed by his straightforward and frank demeanor. Machiavelli states, “If men were entirely good this principle would not hold, but because they are bad, and will not keep faith with

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    republics. In fact, as Machiavelli continues to speak and provide examples about the successes and failures of both republics and principalities, it becomes clearer that the lone purpose of The Prince is to merely provide tactics in political governance, instruction on how to maintain power once it is acquired, and most importantly, advice on how to become a great leader. One of the most prevalent themes found in Machiavelli’s The Prince is the theme of fortune. Machiavelli, though in disguise, focuses

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