РефератыИностранный языкMaMachiavelli Locke And Plato Essay Research Paper

Machiavelli Locke And Plato Essay Research Paper

Machiavelli Locke And Plato Essay, Research Paper


John Locke and Niccolу Machiavelli are political philosophers writing in


two different lands and two different times. Locke?s 17th century England was


on the verge of civil war and Machiavelli?s 15th century Italy was on the


verge of invasion. Yet, students and political philosophers still


enthusiastically read and debate their works today. What is it that draws


readers to these works? Why, after three hundred years, do we still read Two


Treatises on Government, Discourses on Livy, and The Prince? The answer to those


questions lies in each text itself, and careful review will produce discourses


on those questions and many others. The focus of this discourse is to examine


the treatment of ?the people? by both authors, to discover what Machiavelli


and Locke write about the people?s role in their different structures of


government. In particular, this paper seeks to understand that role in regards


to the political power each author yields to, or withholds from, the people. In


addition, these treatments of power and the people will be compared to the


writings of another timeless political philosopher, Plato. By juxtaposing Two


Treatises on Government, Discourses on Livy, The Prince, and The Republic


against one another, this paper will show how writers from three very different


centuries all agreed upon an identical notion of the relationship between the


power of the people and their role in government. This theory is not readily


apparent upon initial reading of these authors. Indeed, most political


philosophers would argue that each author has a very distinct notion of what


role the people play in government. Therefore, an ideal place to start is in the


differences of each author?s portrayal of the people and the political power


they wield. Machiavelli, the most pessimistic of the three writers in regards to


humans and human nature, writes that all men can be accused of ?that defect?


which Livy calls vanity and inconsistency (The Discourses on Livy, 115). He


continues by writing: ??people [are] nothing other than a brute animal that,


although of a ferocious and feral nature, has always been nourished in prison


and in servitude? (Discourses on Livy, 44). Animals, that are by their nature


ferocious, become scared and confused when released from captivity. Without the


shelter and food they had come to expect when ?domesticated,? they are more


susceptible to future attempts at captivity. Man also becomes scared and


confused in freedom after living under the government of others. Machiavelli


writes that these men lack understanding of ?public defense or public


offense,? and quickly return ?beneath the yoke that is most often heavier


than the one it had removed from its neck a little before? (Discourses on Livy,


44). Men are docile like domesticated dogs or cattle, according to this


description, and have a role in government of little political power. With


Plato, there is a continuation of the same theme started by Machiavelli. The


people primarily play a subservient role in Plato?s structure of government


under the rule of monarchs, aristocrats, or philosopher-kings. When discussing


with Adeimantus the virtue and reason behind a regime instituted by


philosophers, Plato does not paint a picture of men much greater than


Machiavelli?s animalistic comparison above. Indeed, he portrays them as easily


swayed and ill-informed by those ?from outside who don?t belong and have


burst in like drunken revelers, abusing one another and indulging a taste for


quarreling? (The Republic, 179). For Plato, the largest majority of men


constitute unknowledgeable masses that persecute the very group that can best


lead them, the philosophers. Even in a democratic regime, a regime based on the


will of the people, Plato does not give us a particularly optimistic view of


men. This regime is composed of three types of men according to Plato; the


multitude; the oligarchic; and the ?men most orderly by nature? (The


Republic, 243). The oligarchic rule the city through the license of the


multitude, and the orderly rule in business through the disadvantage of the


multitude. Thus, Machiavelli sees the people as subjugated and Plato sees the


people as fatuous, both doomed to political ineptitude. With Locke, however, the


character of the people is redeemed. The people, for Locke, represent a


political power akin to force. Indeed, the people are the ultimate source of


power for Locke?s government, whether that government is a legislative body or


a prince. In the closing chapter of his second treatise, Locke details the ways


that government can dissipate when rulers misuse their power. The third way a


prince may dissolve the government is when he arbitrarily alters the electors or


the ways of election, ??without the consent, and contrary to the common


interest of the people? (Two Treatises, 409). Locke makes the actions and


behavior of the sovereign subordinate to the interests shared by all men, and


limits his actions within the confines of public consent. Locke frames the


essential question when he asks, ??who shall be judge whether the Prince or


Legislative act contrary to [the people?s] Trust?? The answer, according to


Locke, is that ?The people shall be judge? (Two Treatises, 426). Machiavelli


echoes this answer, albeit in a subtler manner, in his writings of the Civil


Principality, Chapter IX, in The Prince by stating that the people exert an


influence over the formation of a principality. According to Machiavelli,


??the people neither desire to be commanded nor oppressed by the great?


(The Prince, 39). In this sense, the people constitute a ?humor? of the


city, the opposing ?humor? being the desire of the ?great? to command


and oppress the people. A man should be wary of becoming prince with the support


of the great instead of the support of the people. Without their support, the


prince is doomed to govern either a territory filled with an unmanageable


?great? or a large body of unruly people. Indeed, Machiavelli echoes this in


a later chapter by stating ?? a prince should have two fears: one within, on


account of his subjects; the other o

utside, on account of external powers?


(The Prince, 72). In both this text and Locke?s Two Treatises, the authors


yield an incredible amount of power to the people: the power to both influence


the creation of and bring about the destruction of governments. For Machiavelli,


the people are a large body of people, viewed as more formidable, and,


therefore, more influential, than the great aristocrats in principality


building. For Locke, the people exert a similar influence over the building of a


commonwealth, since it is from the people that the power of the prince or


legislature originates. Moreover, the people can decide to bring about the end


of a particular regime of government if they feel that it no longer adheres to


its responsibilities. Thus, the people, in both Machiavelli and Locke, appear to


share a similar amount of power both in the formation of government and in its


oversight: namely, that of adjudication. In the Discourses, Machiavelli writes


of a cyclical succession of governments, one after another, each one rising to


prominence only to fall to licentiousness. It is through this cycle that


Machiavelli demonstrates the power of the people to adjudicate, and he argues


that it is this adjudication that perpetuates the cycle. Kings rise to


prominence based upon character, until the monarchy becomes hereditary and


degenerates into ?sumptuousness and lasciviousness? (Discourses on Livy,


12). The people then, with the guidance of a leader, overturn this form of


government and institute first an aristocracy, and then popular government. As


with the principality, these modes of government also become licentious. So the


cycle continues anew, with a principality following this popular form of


government. Likewise, the same reasons each form of government declines, namely


licentiousness, sumptuousness, and lasciviousness, also leads to the decline of


each the second time, and so on, and so on. The power of the people acts as


impetus for reform, and reiterates their role as adjudicators. In conflicts


between the prince or legislative and the people, Locke argues that the law


should hold the power of final and resolute arbiter. But in cases where ?the


law is silent, or doubtful, and the thing be of great Consequence,? Locke


argues that the power of judgement falls to the people, and that they should be


the jury for the actions of the prince or legislature. For since the power of


the prince or legislature derives from the will and consent of the people, they


are the proper judges of the limits to which that power can extend. This should


not be understood, however, to indicate that more than this power exists in the


hands of the people, or that they may exercise this power arbitrarily. Locke


argues that it is incumbent upon the Legislative to govern the people, and that


this legislative power ?can never revert to the people whilst that government


lasts? (Two Treatises, 428). Men in Locke?s commonwealth have given up their


rights to the political power that the legislative executes, and, therefore,


removed themselves wielding political power. Moreover, this accedence of power


to the legislative is binding due to the permanent nature of the contract. It is


important, however, to note that the one power which Locke never says the people


should give up is the power to judge the government and the power to revolt


should that government violate its contract. Turning to Plato, it is essential


remember that he wrote a democratic regime is composed of three types of men;


the multitude; the oligarchic; and the ?men most orderly by nature? (The


Republic, 243). It is in his description of the multitude, however, that Plato


reveals the true role and political power of the people. His description from


section 565a reads: ?And the people would be the third class, all those who do


their own work, don?t meddle in affairs, and don?t possess very much.


Whenever they assemble, they constitute the most numerous and most sovereign


class in a democracy? (The Republic, 243). Like Machiavelli, Plato apportions


a large amount of power to the people based on their numerous populaces. This


population, as Adeimantus points out, is not willing to assemble very frequently


unless they get ?some share of the honey.? Plato replies by stating that the


leaders take care to assure that the people have enough to keep them from


becoming unruly, a tactic that implies the power of adjudication, once again, to


the people. If the body of people feel that the ruler is favoring the privileged


class too much, then they can mobilize their large numbers against the ruler.


Therefore, it appears that in Plato as well as in Machiavelli and Locke, the


power of sheer numbers is secondary to the chief role of the people; namely,


that of umpire and as judges of the behavior and actions of the ruler. Thus, it


appears that even among these three different writers, each of whom wrote the


texts analyzed above, there is an agreed upon notion of the role of people in


the various governments that each author describes. Moreover, each author


defines this role in the context of the power people are afforded. Plato and


John Locke may not have agreed with each other in regards to an ideal form of


government, and Machiavelli may not have agreed with himself from one text to


the next in regards to the same subject. Each author, though, dealt with that


unruly multitude, the people, in their works. And by juxtaposing Two Treatises


on Government, Discourses on Livy, The Prince, and The Republic against one


another, it appears that these writers from three very different centuries all


agreed upon an identical notion of the relationship between the power of the


people and their role in government.


517


Locke, John. Two Treatises of Government. Peter Laslett, ed. Cambridge


University Press: Cambridge. 1997. Machiavelli, Niccolo. The Prince. Translated


by Harvey C. Mansfield. 2nd Ed. University of Chicago Press: Chicago &


London. 1998. Machiavelli, Niccolo. Discourses on Livy. Translated by Harvey C.


Mansfield & Nathan Tarcov. University of Chicago Press: Chicago &


London. 1996. Plato. The Republic. Allan Bloom, ed.

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