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008 250814b |||||||e |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9781954839274
040 _cGESM
041 _aeng
_hita
082 _2320 / 188
100 _aMachiavelli, Niccolo
_d(1469-1527)
245 _aThe Prince
246 _aIl Principe
260 _bReader's Library Classics
_cc2021 (1513)
300 _a99 p
_c20/13,5/0,5 cm
_fPaperback
520 _aThe lion cannot guard himself from the toils, nor the fox from the wolves. A Prince must therefore be a fox to discern toils and a lion to drive off wolves. The modern-day term "Machiavellian" is used to describe the deception, dishonesty and cruelty to meet a goal. The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli was weitten as a guide for autocrats on how to govern using means that were meant to deceive and manipulate a government's constituency - to the extent of advocating the use of evil for political expediency. In this classic work, the end justifies the means reigns paramount to Machiavelli's system of government.
521 _aIB
650 _aPolitical Science
_vPhilosophy and Theory of the State
_yRenaissance
700 _aThomson, Ninian Hill
_etrl
942 _2ddc
_cCS
_n0
999 _c19542
_d19542