The Prince
is not a pure history book, it is more a guide book to gain and maintain power
in politics or statesmanship; however, Machiavelli based his analysis on
historical great men and their way of ruling. As I found not every WEM inquires
fit the book theme, I would only use some of them (for every stage of reading).
Grammar-Stage Reading
Does Machiavelli
state his purpose for writing?
Machiavelli
dedicated this book to Lorenzo Di Medici (nephew to Pope Leo X). He analyzed
actions of great men regarding politics and statesmanship, with the hope that
Lorenzo would profit this ‘how to’ summary to run an ideal state and to rescue
Italy.
Who is this story
about?
It is mostly
about Italian’s statesmen, both who were prosper and ruined; the present ones
as well as historical ones. But Machiavelli also mentioned great men from
ancient era: Roman, Greek, and even Moses.
Logic-State Reading
The historian’s major
assertions
Machiavelli
dreamed of having a prudent prince with grandeur, who would be able to free
Italy from its current foreign dominion by applying his exhortation.
Rhetoric-Stage Reading
What is the purpose
of history?
I think this
book is as philosophical as it is political. Machiavelli had the courage to
think outside the box (being under Renaissance influence) regarding qualities
of a ruler. To be a good ruler, a prince must maintain his power, and for doing
so he must be more feared than loved, and sometimes must be a bit ‘cruel’, when
necessary, to create stability. It was contradictory with our moral conscience,
but I think we need this guide to not deviate us from the right path to be a
good ruler (and in some points, to choose a good ruler).
What relationship
does this history has to social problems?
Machiavelli’s
ideas are still relevant until now. Although he wrote much on princedom or
monarchy, his guidance are very useful for any type of statesmanship, including
our modern democracy. Interestingly, Machiavelli also pointed out how citizen
or the people usually act towards their rulers. I found it very similar with
how we act in this modern era.
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I was obsessed with The Prince when I was around 14 and even wrote a paper on it and Machiavelli. In fact, he is the reason I got interested in political science. I have a notebook of all my favourite quotes in the cellar somewhere, and I think it may be time for a re-read.
ReplyDeleteI do like your diagram and the easily accessible way you recapped the chapters :)
Thanks.. And Machiavelli is a good book on politics, his arguments make sense--blunt but reasonable.
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