1 Thoughts on Equality and society; Plato‚ Rousseau‚ and Nietzsche. Equality is the concept of everyone being equal in a certain state‚ with equality there would be little to no biased opinions‚ no fighting over wealth‚ and just a free world where everyone can live amongst one another and still obey the laws without worrying about social structure or who is better than someone else. Many different philosophers have spent years on trying to figure out where inequality first started and what
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195 countries in the world and each of them has different leaders - some of them are better and some of them are worse. Kautilya in the treatise “Arthasastra” and N. Machiavelli in “The Prince” give very similarly but at the same time different views on leadership. Kautilya wrote the “Arthasastra” more than 10 centuries before Machiavelli wrote “the Prince”‚ so there are some theories and thoughts that Machiavelli’s treatise is based on Kautilya’s “Arthasastra” (Violatti 2014). Both authors were political
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yet at the same time preserve its citizens’ natural right to be free? The ideas from Niccolo Machiavelli‚ an Italian aristocrat‚ who published "The Prince" in 1513 for a Medici prince as a guideline on how to rule a country‚ gives a conservative approach to how one should govern. Henry David Thoreau’s "Civil Disobedience" published in 1849‚ offers a liberal approach on how one should be governed. Machiavelli stresses the importance of maintaining order while Thoreau suggests reform. Although their
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It is best to be both feared and loved; however‚ if one cannot be both it is better to be feared than loved. Niccolò di Bernardo dei Machiavelli was born during the renaissance era of Italy in Florence during the 15th century‚ on 3rd May 1469. Regardless of his cliché image of a cynic‚ or his name being directly synonymous to devil‚ Machiavelli did establish himself as an everlasting political figure. Often referred as the father of modern political theory‚ Niccolo lived years pulling of numerous
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1. Liberality is not always bad and parsimony is not always good; thus‚ the statement provided is false. Machiavelli discusses how liberality must be done to be seen by others in order that the prince is recognized for giving. Yet‚ it is best to practice liberality with another’s money or to practice it by using your own money for campaigns and for defense of your nation. He claims that when using your funds for those purposes‚ it is best when it is due to parsimony to show the people you were prepared
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Thomas More‚ Niccolo Machiavelli‚ and John Calvin are three theorists who share and justify their views on the relationship between the state and religion. More‚ the Catholic‚ Machiavelli‚ a critic of the Catholic Church‚ and Calvin‚ the Protestant‚ all believe that religion is a very important element of the state. However‚ More and Calvin also believe that religion can constrain rulers as well as support them‚ which ultimately leads to their conclusion that the arbitrary use of power by the state
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Machiavelli’s The Prince Chapters 15-18 Thesis Chapter XV Thesis- In order to be a great leader one must lie. Important points- In this chapter Machiavelli makes distinctions on how things should be and how they actually are. Machiavelli tells leaders to lean toward self-preservation‚ to do this he insists they will have to lie in certain situations. Regardless if a prince thinks something is bad or evil‚ if it is necessary to maintain a desired state of being‚ he must do it- it is his duty
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learning but the emergence of a new‚ secular and individualistic way of thinking. Such ideation perpetuated the talented intellectuals of the time to formulate new ideas‚ and in Niccolo Machiavelli’s case‚ a new way to govern. In his book‚ The Prince‚ Machiavelli uses his “how to guide” to delineate the political theory a prince should use in order to secure his power and govern his people effectively. This piece
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Document Analysis One: Rousseau Confessions In Confessions by Jean-Jacques Rousseau‚ Rousseau seeks to explain who he is by trying to paint layer by layer‚ a portrait of himself‚ without missing any details and having his end product being interpreted by his readers. Rousseau was born into a lower class family‚ part of the commons‚ in a childhood mixed with medieval and modern values and lifestyles. Rousseau was a product of a mother and father who married out of love‚ being born into a nuclear
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explicit) this consent can be removed. Even for Hobbes‚ the consent of the governed was an active choice made by the original participants that could potentially be removed under certain circumstances. And although it is most explicitly stated by Rousseau (Social Contract‚ Book 1 Chapter 5)‚ we also find common to these three thinkers that the state requires unanimous consent of all to originally obtain legitimacy. But for Kant‚ so many of these crucial aspects of consent seem to be deliberately
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