Description
Book SynopsisWhat is Machiavelli''s place in the history of political thought? Did he seek to revive the civic virtues espoused by ancient Greek and Roman political theorists, or was he an intellectual rebel whose radical critique of the classical philosophic tradition made him a harbinger of the modern era? Almost every significant book on Machiavelli since the beginning of the twentieth century has addressed the question of his relation to classical thought in one form or another. Yet, there has never been a comprehensive study of the relationship between Machiavelli and Xenophon, the classical political theorist whose shrewd analysis of effective politics comes closest to Machiavelli''s. Excellence Unleashedis a detailed comparison of Machiavelli and Xenophon''s political philosophy, focusing on Xenophon''s Education of Cyrus and Hiero or On Tyranny and Machiavelli''s The Prince and Discourses on Livy. This study examines a number of major themes essential to both writers: the moral and politic
Trade ReviewExcellence Unleashed is a fine comparison of Machiavelli and his favorite classical author Xenophon that is long overdue. Rasmussen accompanies his careful analysis with useful strictures and shrewd insights. -- Harvey C. Mansfield, Harvard University
Excellence Unleashed is an analysis at once compact and penetrating of Machiavelli's critique of Xenophon. . . . Ramussen's book is undoubtedly a valuable addition to the literature on Machiavelli and Xenophon. His prose is remarkably clear and his analyses are forceful, convincing and well grounded in the texts he considers. * Polis-Journal Of The Society For Greek Political Thought *
When it comes to the qualities characteristic of contemporary academic writing, lucidity is in the underrepresented minority. Rasmussen's prose exemplifies this virtue as it explores two authors who delight us even as they quicken our thoughts. His crisp formulations make familiar points seem new, and he then goes beyond them by establishing such new connections as the relationship between Machiavelli's critique of Xenophon and his critique of Christianity. This tour de force is accurately described by its own title. -- Wayne Ambler, director of the Herbst Program of Humanities at the University of Colorado at Boulder
Table of ContentsChapter 1 Introduction Part 2 Part One. Republics and Tyrants Chapter 3 Chapter 1. Xenophon's Persian Republic Chapter 4 Chapter 2. Tumults, Liberty, and Tyranny: Machiavelli's Unconventional Republicanism Chapter 5 Chapter 3. The Reform of Tyranny in Xenophon's Hiero Part 6 Part Two. Princes and Philosophers Chapter 7 Chapter 4. The Legacy of Cyrus and the Limits of Politics Chapter 8 Chapter 5. Cyrus' Socratic Education Chapter 9 Chapter 6. Machiavelli's Cyrus and the Humanity of Effective Rule Chapter 10 Chapter 7. Glory, Moral Innovation, and the Christian Prince Chapter 11 Conclusion: The Philosopher and Politics