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The Friendless Republic: Freedom, Faction, and Friendship in Machiavelli's Discourses
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 December 2018
Abstract
Civic republicans have traditionally appealed to friendship as a means of preserving popular liberty, but Machiavelli is a notable exception to this rule. In fact, I argue, he views efforts to reconcile friendship and politics as (1) philosophically dubious, because grounded in false conceptions of person and society, and (2) practically harmful, because they perpetuate patterns of asymmetric dependence that are inconsistent with a free way of life. Machiavelli's neglected skepticism about the political potential of friendship deepens his critique of the Ciceronian concordia, reveals a diminished idea of the common good, and distances him from the civic republican tradition to which he is so often said to belong.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright © University of Notre Dame 2018
Footnotes
Many thanks are due to the UC Davis Political Theory Forum, and particularly to John T. Scott, Andi Rowntree, and Matthew Perry, for their helpful comments and suggestions.
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