Description
Machiavelli, master conspirator of effectual truth, meets his equal in Montesquieu, who takes the task of maintaining the modern world.
About the Author
Harvey C. Mansfield has spent his life at Harvard, where he studies and teaches political philosophy. He is a translator of Machiavelli and Tocqueville, writing on Edmund Burke, the invention of indirect government, defensible and constitutional liberalism, the discovery of the theory of executive power, and the nature of manliness. He has received the National Humanities Medal (2004), delivered the annual Thomas Jefferson lecture (2007), and has been awarded the Bradley Prize.
Reviews
'Mansfield has a signature way of reading and writing, which is on full display in Machiavelli's Effectual Truth. As a reader, he is not afraid to make bold conjectures about arguments, suggestions, and intentions that an author does not state plainly but conveys between the lines of his text. As a writer, he blends simplicity and subtle sophistication. Mansfield is a master at using simple, unpretentious words in phrases that are more artful and telling than they first appear.' Devin Stauffer, Professor of Government, The University of Texas at Austin
'The scholar is suspicious, attentive, sharp. The writer, austere, stingy, and often funny in his many polemical puns. Reading Harvey Mansfield has always been a first-class intellectual experience, but Machiavelli's Effectual Truth offers the pleasure of a true tour de force: not just a highly original family tree of The Prince and the Discourses on Livy's political realism, from Machiavelli to Montesquieu and Tocqueville, but an existential inquiry into what it means to create, to hand down, and to inherit in the world of ideas - as much today as in the past.' Gabriele Pedulla, Professor of Italian Literature and Comparative Literature, University of Roma Tre, author of Machiavelli in Tumult
'Having long reigned as the foremost interpreter of Machiavelli's thought, Harvey Mansfield offers a provocative examination of Machiavelli's significant, but overlooked, term- 'the effectual truth.' Mansfield finds monumental significance in Machiavelli's neologism, which shaped the history of modern political philosophy and hence our contemporary world. This is a challenging work, full of insight as well as wry humor that demands - but also rewards - reflection.' Vickie B. Sullivan, Cornelia M. Jackson Professor of Political Science, Tufts University
Book Information
ISBN 9781009320122
Author Harvey C. Mansfield
Format Hardback
Page Count 250
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 544g