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Dictionary of the History of Ideas

Studies of Selected Pivotal Ideas
  
  

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BIBLIOGRAPHY

Before Machiavelli, texts: L. B. Alberti, I Libri della
famiglia,
ed. Cecil Grayson, in Opere volgari, Vol. I (Bari,
1960). Matteo Palmieri, Libro della vita civile (Florence,
1529). Petrarch, Le Familiari (Familiarium rerum libri), here
cited as Fam., ed. in 4 vols. by Vittorio Rossi, the last
vol. by Umberto Bosco (Florence, 1933-42). Girolamo
Savonarola, Prediche e scritti, ed. Mario Ferrara (Milan,
1930).

Before Machiavelli, commentary: Werner Jaeger, Paideia:
the Ideals of Greek Culture,
trans. Gilbert Highet, 3 vols.
(New York, 1939), on the Greek idea of virtue (aretē).
Theodor E. Mommsen, “Petrarch and the Story of the
Choice of Hercules,” Medieval and Renaissance Studies, ed.
Eugene F. Rice, Jr. (Ithaca, N.Y., 1959). Erwin Panofsky,
“Artist, Scientist, Genius: Notes on the Renaissance—
Dämmerung,” The Renaissance: Six Essays (New York and
Evanston, Ill., 1968), esp. p. 169 and n. (and the other works
of Panofsky cited there).

Machiavelli, texts: The most recent edition in Italian is
the Feltrinelli Edition, Vol. I, Il Principe e Discorsi, ed.
Sergio Bertelli (Milan, 1960), here cited as Prince and Disc.
respectively; Vol. II, Arte della Guerra e scritti politici
minori,
ed. Sergio Bertelli (Milan, 1961); Vol. VI, Lettere,
ed. Franco Gaeta (Milan, 1961); Vol. VIII, Il teatro e scritti
letterari,
ed. Franco Gaeta (Milan, 1965); all vols. contain
bibliographical essays. Translations, unless otherwise
identified, are by Jerrold E. Seigel. The best English
edition of the Discorsi is The Discourses, trans. with intro.
and notes by Leslie J. Walker, S.J. (New Haven, 1950). The
most recent translation is Machiavelli, The Chief Works and
Others,
trans. Allan Gilbert, 3 vols. (Durham, N.C., 1965).

Machiavelli, commentary: Eric W. Cochrane, “Machi-
avelli 1940-1960,” Journal of Modern History, 33 (1961),
113-36, is a bibliographical article. Felix Gilbert,
Machiavelli and Guicciardini (Princeton, 1965); idem, “On
Machiavelli's Idea of Virtuù,Renaissance News, 4 (1951),
53-55, and the discussion by L. C. Mackinney and Felix
Gilbert, ibid., 5 (1952), 21-23 and 70-71. R. de Mattei, Dal
premachiavellismo all'antimachiavellismo europeo del
cinquecento,
course of lectures at Rome University, 1955-56
(Rome, 1956). Eduard Mayer, Machiavelli's Geschichts-
auffassung und sein Begriff virtù
(Munich and Berlin, 1912).
Friedrich Meinecke, Machiavellism: The Doctrine of Raison
D'Etat and Its Place in Modern History,
trans. Douglas Scott
(London, 1957). Gennaro Sasso, Niccolò Machiavelli: Storia
del suo pensiero politico
(Naples, 1958). Neal Wood,
“Machiavelli's Concept of Virtù Reconsidered,” Political
Studies,
15 (1967), 159-72.

After Machiavelli, texts: Encyclopédie ou Dictionnaire
raisonné des sciences
(Berne and Lausanne, 1781), Vol. 35,


486

art. “Vertu.” Frederick the Great, Réfutation du Prince de
Machiavel
(Antimachiavell), Oeuvres (Berlin, 1846-57), Vol.
8. Thomas Hobbes, Elements of Law, Natural and Politic
(Cambridge, 1928); idem, Leviathan (London, 1651, and
subsequent editions). Friedrich Nietzsche, The Will to Power,
trans. Anthony M. Ludovici, 2 vols. in The Complete Works
of Friedrich Nietzsche,
ed. Oscar Levy (New York, 1964),
Vols. 14 and 15.

After Machiavelli, commentary: the works of de Mattei
and Meinecke cited above. John Laird, Hobbes (New York,
1934; 1968). Leo Strauss, The Political Philosophy of Hobbes
(Chicago, 1952). Walter Kaufmann, Nietzsche (Princeton,
1960; 1968).

JERROLD E. SEIGEL

[See also Fortune; Happiness; Machiavellism; Necessity;
1">Relativism in Ethics; 9">Renaissance Humanism; Right and
Good; State; Stoicism.]