Machiavelli's The Prince

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“He who wishes to be obeyed must know how to command.” Not everyone is born a leader, it is what is inside that truly decides they were born to lead. Machiavelli wrote a book that changed the world. The book was so great that it was banned in 1559 because they knew he had found the key to leadership. The Prince laid the foundation for the moral world of politics stating the differences between private principles and public demand. Machiavelli believed in a government not centralized by a lordship. He wanted to preserve Italy and he did this through the preservation of vivere libero which is the free life of the Florentine city-state and the other republics of Italy. Machiavelli was a great leader because he found innovative ways of governance …show more content…

“He who becomes a Prince through the favor of the people should always keep on good terms with them; which it is easy for him to do, since all they ask is not to be oppressed.” In any decision that was made, the subject’s well-being had to remain intact. Sometimes hard choices have to be made. A leader would not be chosen if he distressed about the morals threats of the power he implemented in the people’s name. Rather a prince who would sleep soundly at night after taking a risk while their title was on the line. The prince implemented what needed to be done for their …show more content…

The laws mattered because the opinion of the people mattered and if a leader bent the laws, the people would force him out of office. “Men in general judge rather by the eye than by the hand, for every one can see but few can touch. Everyone sees what you seem, but few know what you are.” Machiavelli advised leaders to portray virtues that they did not practice in their own private life. He believed that the people cared more about whether their leader brought amity and security rather than him being an honest

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