Thoughts on Thoughts
Peter Schultz
From Leo Strauss’s book Thoughts on Machiavelli: “Machiavelli … takes issue explicitly and coherently with the traditional and customary view according to which the prince ought to live virtuously and ought to rule virtuously.” [59] But despite this, “the political prerequisites of Italy’s liberation [are] withheld because Machiavelli desired to keep the noble and shining end untarnished by the base and dark means … indispensable to its achievement.” [67]
This seems to make sense except Machiavelli might have not thought that that “noble and shining end” was illusionary insofar as established ways require “base and dark means” to be maintained. Insofar as that is the case, one should wonder about whether liberating or unifying Italy, as well as all established orders, is so noble and shining. Living virtuously and ruling virtuously are luxuries that princes cannot afford. And, yet, appearing to do so is indispensable.
Further, the liberation of Italy would not be “spontaneous.” It would require “a policy of iron and poison, of murder and treachery, … the extermination of Italian princely families and the destruction of Italian republican cities…. The liberation of Italy means a completer revolution…, above all else a revolution in thinking about right and wrong, [learning] that the patriotic end hallows every means however much condemned by the most exalted traditions of both philosophy and religion.” [67-8]
So, “cruelty well used,” as engaged in by Cesare Borgia, does not seem to be enough. After all, “Cesare’s successes ultimately benefitted only the Church and thus increased the obstacles to the conquest or liberation of Italy.” Further, “Cesare was a mere tool of Alexander VI and hence, a mere tool of the papacy…. For Cesare’s power was base on the power of the papacy. That power failed him when Alexander died.”
Which means that Cesare’s power was not based on “cruelty well used.” And the argument that it was is merely what Strauss calls the “traditional exterior” of Machiavelli’s thought. It was, as Machiavelli’s examples make clear, known, well known the ancients as well to almost anyone who engaged in politics. But the “revolutionary center” of Machiavelli’s thought is something different altogether.
In the “traditional exterior” of Machiavelli’s thought, he presents himself as seeking “to found a pagan Rome, a Rome destined to become again the most glorious republic and the seminar and the heart of the most glorious empire.” But this assumes that Machiavelli actually or finally thought that pagan Rome was “a most glorious republic” and a “most glorious empire.” If this is the case, then it is fair to say Machiavelli’s thought wasn’t revolutionary; it was in fact reactionary.
By focusing on and embracing as he does on “cruelty well used,” Machiavelli is focused on means, obscuring that genuine revolutions require new ends. Cesare was “a mere tool of Alexander” and “of the papacy” because he didn’t dispute and reject the Church and its ends. And so, despite his “cruelty well used,” his “successes … benefitted only the Church.” Insofar as Italy – and other places as well – could not be conquered or liberated without challenging and rejecting the modes and orders established by the Church, by Christianity that is, just so far than no genuine revolution would be possible. The same may be said of the modes and orders that had been established by pagan Rome and even those established by the likes of Plato and Aristotle.