Introduction to the Princeton Classics Edition |
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vii | |
Introduction |
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xxiii | |
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PART ONE Particularity and Time |
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The Conceptual Background |
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I The Problem and Its Modes |
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A) Experience, Usage and Prudence |
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3 | (28) |
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II The Problem and Its Modes |
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B) Providence, Fortune and Virtue |
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31 | (18) |
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III The Problem and Its Modes |
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C) The Vita Activa and the Vivere Civile |
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49 | (34) |
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PART TWO The Republic and its Fortune |
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Florentine Political Thought from 1494 to 1530 |
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IV From Bruni to Savonarola |
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Fortune, Venice and Apocalypse |
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83 | (31) |
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V The Medicean Restoration |
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A) Guicciardini and the Lesser Ottimati, 1512-1516 |
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114 | (42) |
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VI The Medicean Restoration |
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B) Machiavelli's Il Principe |
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156 | (27) |
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A) Machiavelli's Discorsi and Arte della Guerra |
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183 | (36) |
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B) Guicciardini's Dialogo and the Problem of Optimate Prudence |
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219 | (53) |
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IX Giannotti and Contarini |
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Venice as Concept and as Myth |
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272 | (61) |
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PART THREE Value and History in the Prerevolutionary Atlantic |
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X The Problem of English Machiavellism |
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Modes of Civic Consciousness before the Civil War |
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333 | (28) |
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XI The Anglicization of the Republic |
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A) Mixed Constitution, Saint and Citizen |
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361 | (40) |
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XII The Anglicization of the Republic |
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B) Court, Country and Standing Army |
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401 | (22) |
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XIII Neo-Machiavellian Political Economy |
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The Augustan Debate over Land, Trade and Credit |
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423 | (39) |
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XIV The Eighteenth-Century Debate |
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Virtue, Passion and Commerce |
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462 | (44) |
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XV The Americanization of Virtue |
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Corruption, Constitution and Frontier |
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506 | (47) |
Afterword |
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553 | (32) |
Bibliography |
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585 | (16) |
Index |
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601 | |