POL200Y1 Chapter Notes -Headon, Petrarch, Preemptive War

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Machiavelli composed the prince as a practical guide for ruling (though some scholars argue that the book was intended as a guide on how to rule). The prince is not particularly theoretical or abstract; its prose is simple and its logic straightforward. These traits underscore machiavelli"s desire to provide practical, easily understandable advice. The first two chapters describe the book"s scope. The prince is concerned with autocratic regimes, not with republican regimes. The first chapter defines the various types of principalities and princes; in doing so, it constructs an outline for the rest of the book. Chapter iii comprehensively describes how to maintain composite principalities that is, principalities that are newly created or annexed from another power, so that the prince is not familiar to the people he rules. Chapter iii also introduces the book"s main concerns power politics, warcraft, and popular goodwill in an encapsulated form. Chapters iv through xiv constitute the heart of the book.

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