The Prince
Publisher: Signet Classics, 2008 , 126 pages
ISBN: 978-0-451-53100-1
Synopsis:
- Toggle Synopsis
-
For more than four hundred years, The Prince has been the basic handbook of politics, statemanship, and power. Written by a Florentine nobleman whose name has become a synonym for crafty plotting, this fascinating document is as pertinent today as when it first appeared. After a lifetime of winning and losing at the game of politics, Machiavelli set down for all time its ageless rules and moves in this highly readable formula for anyone who seeks power. At a time before modern democracy, Machiavelly was less concerned with right and wrong than with currying favor with the ruling Medicis, and his work came to be thought of as a blueprint for dictators.
Witty, informative, and devilishy shrewd, The Prince has long been required reading for those interested in politics and power, and it has long since become one of the world's most significant books.
Table of Contents:
- Toggle Table of Contents
-
- Introduction
- The Various Kinds of Government and the Ways By Which They Are Established
- Of Hereditary Monarchies
- Of Mixed Monarchies
- Why the Kingdom of Darius, Occupied by Alexander, Did Not Rebel Against the Succesors of the Latter After His Death
- The Way to Govern Cities or Dominions That, Previous to Being Occupied, Lived Under Their Own Laws
- Of New Dominions Which Have Been Acquired By One's Own Arms and Ability
- Of New Dominions Acquired By the Power of Others or By Fortune
- Of Those Who Have Attained the Position of Prince by Villainy
- Of the Civic Principality
- How the Strength of All States Should Be Measured
- Of Ecclesiastical Principalities
- The Different Kinds of Militia and Mercenary Soldiers
- Of Auxiliary, Mixed, and Native Troops
- The Duties of a Prince With Regard to the Militia
- Of the Things for Which Men, and Especially Princes, Are Praised or Blamed
- Of Liberality and Niggardliness
- Of Cruelty and Clemency, and Whether It Is Better to Be Loved or Feared
- In What Way Princes Must Keep Faith
- That We Must Avoid Being Despised and Hated
- Whether Fortresses and Other Things Which Princes Often Contrive Are Useful or Injurious
- How a Prince Must Act in Order to Gain Reputation
- Of the Secretaies of Princes
- How Flatterers Must Be Shunned
- Why the Princes of Italy Have Lost Their States
- How Much Fortune Can Do in Human Affairs and How It May Be Opposed
- Exhortation to Liberate Italy From the Barbarians
- Afterword
Reviews:
The Prince
Rating: ********** (Excellent)
What can you say? This is a classical book, if not the classical book!
You can read it in two hours, but you'll spend the rest of your life trying to master it! And you will get back to it, time and time again...
Regardless if you want to be a powerplayer/politician or avoid them, you need to have read this book, or you're out of your depth. To be frank, if you don't read this, you're just stupid.