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Machiavelli's Effectual Truth: Creating the Modern World

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Machiavelli is said to be a Renaissance thinker, yet in a notable phrase he invented, 'the effectual truth,' he attacked the high-sounding humanism typical of the Renaissance, while mounting a conspiracy against the classical and Christian values of his time. In Machiavelli's Effectual Truth this overlooked phrase is studied and explained for the first time. The upshot of 'effectual truth' for any individual is to not depend on anyone or anything outside yourself to keep you free and secure. Mansfield argues that this phrase reveals Machiavelli's approach to modern science, with its focus on the efficient cause and concern for fact. He inquires into the effect Machiavelli expected from his own writings, who believed his philosophy would have an effect that future philosophers could not ignore. His plan, according to Mansfield, was to bring about a desired effect and thus to create his own future and ours.

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  • Shows how Machiavelli inspired modern science and modern politics
  • Provides strikingly new interpretation of Montesquieu's chief work
  • Explains Montesquieu's aim and design for the first time through his relation to Machiavelli
Author: Mansfield Harvey
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 296
ISBN: 9781009320153
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2023

1. Machiavelli's succession problem
2. Machiavelli's world
3. Leo Strauss on The Prince
4. The cuckold in Machiavelli's Mandragola
5. Leonardo Bruni and Machiavelli on civic humanism
6. Montesquieu and Machiavelli
7. Tocqueville's Machiavellianism.

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.

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