Lexington Books
Pages: 176
Trim: 6⅛ x 9¼
978-0-7391-0221-3 • Hardback • June 2001 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
978-0-7391-0277-0 • Paperback • June 2001 • $51.99 • (£40.00)
978-0-7391-5759-6 • eBook • June 2001 • $49.00 • (£38.00)
Michael Palmer is Professor of Political Science at the University of Maine. He is the author of Love of Glory and the Common Good: Aspects of the Political Thought of Thucydides (1992), and coeditor of Political Philosophy and the Human Soul: Essays in Memory of Allan Bloom (with Thomas L. Pangle).
Chapter 1 Mastering Slaves or Mastering Science?: An Aristotelian Reprise
Chapter 2 Kings, Philosophers, and Tyrants in Plato's Republic
Chapter 3 Alcibiades and the Question of Tyranny in Thucydides
Chapter 4 Thucydides on Ambition to Rule
Chapter 5 Machiavellian virtù and Thucydidean arete: Moderation and the Common Good
Chapter 6 Machiavelli's Inhuman Humanism in The Prince
Chapter 7 The Master Fool: The Conspiracy of Machiavelli's Mandragola
Chapter 8 Hobbesian and Thucydidean Realism
Chapter 9 The Citizen Philosopher: Rousseau's Dedicatory Letter to the Discourse on Inequality
Chapter 10 On Leo Strauss's Jerusalem and Athens
Chapter 11 On George Grant's English-Speaking Justice
Chapter 12 On Allan Bloom's The Closing of the American Mind
Building upon and branching out from his searching and insightful work on Thucydides, Michael Palmer here offers a series of wide-ranging essays on ancient and modern philosophy. The highlight of the book is a set of essays on Machiavelli, including a penetrating analysis of Mandragola that freshly illuminates the Italian philosopher's achievement as a dramatist....
— Paul Cantor, University of Virginia
This edition of Michael Palmer's essays is a very welcome publishing event. Ranging from the political thought of the ancients to that of the moderns, Palmer's touch is sure. All serious political theorists will want this book on their shelf.....
— Jean M. Yarbrough, Bowdoin College
Michael Palmer is one of the most successful teachers of political philosophy in North America today. This collection of his essays shows why. Palmer ranges over the entire history of political thought, combining careful scholarship with trenchant analysis, shedding clear new light on perennial texts and perennial problems....
— Clifford Orwin
The incisive little summary diagnosis of The Prince, by itself, apart from the other gems, makes Palmer's a book to have.....
— Robert Faulkner, Boston College
Ranging with graceful erudition and lively intelligence over major figures in the history of political thought from Aristotle to the present, this is a collection of illuminating interpretive studies that will richly reward both students and scholars.....
— Thomas L. Pangle, University of Texas at Austin