Now to start The Discourses-NOT!
Posted by bilothman on 28th February 2009
Instead of reading The Discourses after I read the introduction to it I chose to read “The Backgrounds” section of The Prince, which entailed 140 pages of scholarly articles and at the end, two pages of epigrams (Yay Lord Henry!). One would imagine the articles would help me obtain insight into Machiavelli’s writings, and they did; but only to a limited extent. Most of the writing compared Machiavelli to a countless number of other writers and philosophers whom I had never heard of, and don’t plan to read about. I would if I had the time, but I only have until May to finish this project, which seems like a lot of time, but when one takes into account the amount of work regular classes require, there really isn’t that much time to do this project. I have resolved to make the best use of my time, which doesn’t include hunting down books by obscure authors.
I feel 99.99% of people-including myself- couldn’t understand the analyses that I read. One would have to be a philosophy major, which makes my wonder why the articles were even added to the The Prince. I skimmed through about half of the total pages, highlighting the passages that actually had a point to them. The authors of the articles were all post-doctorate professors; and ironically their writing wasn’t as clear as I thought it would be. Like Crick’s introduction, it was weighed down by so many independent clauses that I often became lost in the rhetoric. After about 20 pages of being frustrated, I just stopped rereading and skimmed over any name that I didn’t know. Perhaps this is a crude way to read, but to my credit, I found the points the author was trying to make with his or her examples and highlighted them. Knowing the conclusion is the important part, and like I mentioned before: I don’t have the time to research 40+ philosophical references, let alone incorporate a significant number of them into my project.
Crick’s introduction was considerably longer than any single article in the Backgrounds section, but the writing as all his own. He made sparse references to other works of literature, which made his writing more precise than the other articles I read. The other writers just compared Machiavelli to other writers and philosophers; and unless the reader has extensive knowledge of them, he or she will not understand the comparison. I remember one article: “Big Words, Exact Meanings” By: J.H. Whitefield, started off well, but then managed to ramble on, referencing seemingly every writer from 1500-1900. There was a point where I skimmed until I ceased to see names that I was unfamiliar with. I wondered how this guy could have a PhD and not be able to explain his own ideas with out the help of other writers.
But to Whitefield and the other Background author’s credit, they did make many important points. And although their jargon equaled or exceeded their clarity I am happy I read their analyses. Their thoughts laid the foundation for my own. I will take a week off reading to write them in this blog, then I will start The Discourses.
And some advice to my fellow readers: take your time reading through scholarly articles, they give great ideas for blog entries and pieces for the final project. They can be more useful than the book itself.
Peace-
Posted in Backgrounds, The Prince | 1 Comment »



