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From Politics to Reason of State

From Politics to Reason of State

From Politics to Reason of State

The Acquisition and Transformation of the Language of Politics 1250–1600
Maurizio Viroli, Princeton University, New Jersey
June 2005
Paperback
9780521673433

    Between the end of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth centuries, the language of politics underwent a radical transformation. The author argues that this transformation amounted to a "revolution of politics," global in scope, and wide-ranging in its intellectual and moral implications. Not only did the meaning and the range of application of the concept of politics change, but also the status of political science, the role of political education, and the value of political liberty. For three centuries politics had enjoyed the status of the noblest human science, but emerged from the revolution as an ignoble, sordid, and depraved activity. It was no longer the means of fighting corruption, but the means of perpetuating it.
    This "revolution of politics" has received little attention, despite its importance. This study fills a gap in the history of political thought, and attempts to return to a conception of politics as an activity worth committing ourselves to.

    • Good, original study of the transformation of political language in the Renaissance

    Reviews & endorsements

    "...an important contribution to the study of politics in the early-modern era." William V. Hudon, 16th Century Journal

    "Hereby hangs a tale of ideological innovation and conceptual change told with considerable erudition and detailed scholarship by Maurizio Viroli....[T]here is no doubt that 'politics' in early modern Italy has received a first-rate chronicle. The memory it revives may yet assist the restoration of civil philosophy in our time." James Farr, American Political Science Review

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    Product details

    June 2005
    Paperback
    9780521673433
    344 pages
    229 × 152 × 20 mm
    0.541kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • 1. The acquisition of the language of politics
    • 2. The philosophy of the city and the political man
    • 3. Machiavelli and the republican idea of politics
    • 4. Francesco Guicciardini: between politics and art of the state
    • 5. The last glimmerings of civil philosophy
    • 6. The triumph of reason of state
    • Epilogue
    • Bibliography of primary and secondary sources.
      Author
    • Maurizio Viroli , Princeton University, New Jersey