
| 作者简介: Paul A. Rahe is Jay P. Walker Professor of American History at the University of Tulsa. His first book, Republics Ancient and Modern: Classical Republicanism and the American Revolution (1992) was an alternative selection of the History Book Club and was reissued in a three-volume paperback edition by the University of North Carolina Press in 1994. He co-edited Montesquieu's Science of Politics: Essays on the Spirit of Laws (Rowman and Littlefield, 2001) and has published chapters in numerous other edited works as well as articles in such journals as The American Journal of Philology, The American Historical Review, The Review of Politics, The Journal of the Historical Society, The American Spectator, and The Wilson Quarterly, among others. He is the recipient of a Rhodes Scholarship and various other research fellowships. |
| List of Contributors page Acknowledgments Abbreviations and Brief Titles Introduction: Machiavelli's Liberal Republican Legacy Prologue: Machiavelli's Rapacious Republicanism xxxi PART I THE ENGLISH COMMONWEALTHMEN 1 Machiavelli in the English Revolution 2 The Philosophy of Liberty: Locke's Machiavellian Teaching 3 Muted and Manifest English Machiavellism: The Reconciliation of Machiavellian Republicanism with Liberalism in Sidney's Discourses Concerning Government and Trenchard's and Gordon's Cato's Letters PART II THE MODERATE ENLIGHTENMENT 4 Getting Our Bearings: Machiavelli and Hume 5 The Machiavellian Spirit of Montesquieu's Liberal Republic 6 Benjamin Franklin's “Machiavellian” Civic Virtue PART III THE AMERICAN FOUNDING 7 The American Prince? George Washington's Anti-Machiavellian Moment 8 John Adams's Machiavellian Moment 9 Thomas Jefferson's Machiavellian Political Science 10 James Madison's Princes and Peoples 11 Was Alexander Hamilton a Machiavellian Statesman? Index |
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