Machiavelli, More and Erasmus
Niccolo Macchiaveli was an Italian political theorist that lived from 1469 until 1527. Macchiaveli’s writings included The Prince (1513), which described the achievement and maintenance of power by a determined ruler indifferent to moral considerations and Discorsi. Desiderius Erasumus (1466- 1536) was a Dutch Renaissance scholar and Roman Catholic theologian who sought to revive classical texts from antiquity, restore simple Christian faith based on Scripture, and eradicate the improprieties of the medieval Church. Erasumus’ works included The Manual of the Christian Knight (1503) and The Praise of Folly (1509). Thomas More (1478-1535) was an English politician, humanist scholar, and a Catholic martyr that was canonized in 1935. His political essay Utopia (1516), speculated about life under an ideal government. All three of these scholars lived around the same period of time but each of them developed their own unique political theories and conveyed them in their own unique methods. Passions, desires and money though were three things that all three of the authors mentioned in their respective political essays. Machiavelli, Erasmus and More agreed that passions, desires and money were destructive in society and politics if u
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Some common words found in the essay are:
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Approximate Word count = 4718
Approximate Pages = 19 (250 words per page double spaced)
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