Saturday 14 September 2013

Power and State: Niccolo Machiavelli (1469-1527)


I Introduction

Dates: 1469 Birth
             1498 Confirmed as second chancellor to the Florentine republic
             1512 Spanish troops attack and Florence surrenders
                       Machiavelli convicted and punished for involvement in anti-Medici conspiracy
            1513 Wrote The Prince
            1515-19 Wrote Discourses on Livy
            1527 Death                                         

Machiavelli expounded requirements for maintenance of political stability and what is required of those in power in order to secure these goods? Answer to these questions rest on interplay of desirable personal qualities of rulers and effective use of force to prevent anarchy. In political philosophy, Machiavelli enjoys a sinister reputation for justifying amoral politics or politics devoid of moral considerations. At the same time he also has been admired for being the first modern thinker who introduced secular politics. These contradictory images are a result of either misunderstanding of contexts if his writings or ignorance about their content and implications.
In The Prince, he advised rulers of ways and means to seize and keep power. While The Discourses instructed on methods to ensure stability for a new revolutionary regime through participation and philosopher prince.
According to Machiavelli, politics was to be judged by success of its outcomes. This helped him make a dispassionate study of political power and enquire into secular origins of political authority and the state. His writings represent the dawn of a new age which rejected idealization and insisted on need to grasp the realities of politics. He was the first to grasp the tone of changes and initiated scientific study of politics and hence honoured as the “first modern political theorist and scientist”.

II Renaissance-Italy during Machiavelli’s times:

Sixteenth century Italy had the greatest influence on Machiavelli’s ideas. Italian state and society were in complete institutional decay. Even though it was seen as the place of greatest impact of Renaissance, yet it witnessed the worst political corruption and moral degradation. The older civic institutions had declined and medieval ideas like church and the empire were dead. Government agencies resorted to cruelty and violence and public spirit had been lost. Force and craft had become key to success in public life. These conditions had a major impact on Machiavelli’s political thought. His understanding of conditions in Italy led to the belief that human nature was fundamentally selfish and that only a powerful ruler/prince could bring order to a diseased polity and society. Thus, state and laws based on use of force were keys to political success and stability. It was the result of such a narrow concern that his ideas failed to impact on political thought of the next two hundred centuries.

III Power

Study of concept of Power is central to Politics. Machiavelli and Hobbes laid foundations of the concept. Power for Machiavelli was domination or force. In simple words, he defined power as the ruler’s / prince’s ability to use threat of force for successful preservation of the sovereign state. The success of a ruler depended on domination without resorting to use of actual force. The significance of concept of power/force can be judged from the fact that he defined politics as the struggle for acquisition, maintenance and consolidation of political power.

Machiavelli provided a secular outlook to use of power, devoid of any moral judgments. It was for him simply an instrument for success in politics. The question of its rightness or wrongness was of no concern. He emphasized on amoral quality of power. A ruler was to be judged by the successful outcome of his actions and not the morality of his intentions/actions In other words, he spoke of its successful use by a ruler for survival and stability of the state. The only real concern of political ruler is acquisition and maintenance of power. Only by means of efficient use of power can individuals be coerced in to obedience to laws. And only by its effective use will the ruler be able to maintain the state in safety and security.  This emphasis of Machiavelli on use of power/force by ruler is related to his ideas on human nature. A brief look at the same will be useful to understand the concept.

Entire political thought of Machiavelli is based on the assumption that human nature is fundamentally selfish. Hence the ruler/prince must depend on individual desire for security and power for commanding obedience from people. Human desires for power, wealth, security, etc are unlimited existed along with scarcity in nature. This leads to conflict and threat of anarchy. Such a threat can be limited by two things: 1) threat of force behind law, and 2) ability of the ruler to convince people that only a strong government can guarantee safety and security of individual life and property. Thus, only a strong government can prevent anarchy that threatens life and property.

It is clear from the above that, according to Machiavelli, humans are bad in general and that a desire for safety of life and property brings them under a government. To put this in context, he was concerned with corruption and decline of public spirit in Italy. And that he traced the roots of this corruption to human nature and absence of strong ruler. He was convinced that in such a corrupt society, only an absolute monarchy could bring stability and reform. Prevalence of inequalities of power and wealth, violence, lawlessness and dishonesty made republican form of government impossible.

Thus authority belonged to those who had the power/capacity to enforce it. As a result, he concludes in his advice to the Prince that a ruler should prefer to cultivate fear in subjects rather than affection. For a strong ruler, violence and deception are superior to legality in maintaining effective control over citizens. People obey to commands of ruler/state only because they fear the loss of their life and or property etc. In the context of law, Machiavelli argued that obedience to laws depended entirely upon the threat of coercive/brute force. Hence, Machiavelli argues in favour of an authority based only on supreme political power. In context, human nature and prevalent conditions in Italy meant that people are compelled to obey only in face of superior power of state.

Machiavelli, in The Prince, advised the ruler to develop certain qualities to achieve success in politics. In summary he requires the ruler to be of a “flexible character”. In other words the statesman should be wise enough to know which strategies and techniques are to be used in what particular circumstances. He refers to this as ‘Virtu’/ Civic Virtu. A strong Prince should have mastered the art of effective application of power in any situation. Such qualities prepare the ruler with an ability to strongly respond to the ever present threat of anarchy.

IV State

Machiavelli is known as the first thinker to use the term state in his study and analysis of medieval conditions. Thereafter the concept was developed by later thinkers in political philosophy. The idea of Sovereign State was emergent in Machiavelli’s political thought. He described State as ‘the power which has authority over men’. The idea is important because it describes nature of state and not its ends/ultimate goals/purpose.
He made a definite break from the medieval assumptions of idea of limited state subordinate to the church/papal authority. He formulated the idea of state as a secular, independent and morally neutral organisation. However, a closer look at his ideas also reveals that these were a result of the specific conditions prevalent during the time. Only a contextual reading of his thoughts on state would help to understand his concept of state.

Moral degradation and civic corruption in Italy are the starting points of his analysis. He also looked in to factors that fostered public spirit overriding private interests. Corruption meant subordination of public values to private sphere. Simply corruption results when public sphere is used for furthering private aims and interests. As discussed earlier, for him, humans had the innate desire to control and dominate others. However need for security and safety led people to form government of the strongest. Thus, only a strong state under a powerful ruler could guarantee safety of life and property to individuals.
Thus a strong ruler and strong state were the essential requirements for a peaceful and orderly existence. Corruption could be tackled only with extraordinary measures like rule by a strong prince with overwhelming powers. In addition martial qualities in rulers were needed to defend the state against external aggression and internal disunity.

While justifying a powerful state, Machiavelli also gives supreme importance to ruler as lawmaker or source of laws. Successful state must be founded by a single man. In a corrupt society, reform should be undertaken only by a ruler as the source of all laws.

For Machiavelli, ruler as a lawmaker was the architect of state and society. There was no limit to what statesman could do, provided he understands the rules of the art of government. Such an exaggerated belief in capacity of ruler and a state was due to his understanding of the problems of 16th century Italy and also due to his beliefs on human nature. These led him to argue that the State and force behind laws must be the only power that holds society together. Thus moral obedience must finally be derived from law and government.

Thus Machiavelli supported an absolute state under a powerful ruler. In this context he recommended double standards of conduct/behavior for statesman and private citizens. The statesman was to be pragmatic/practical while dealing with public issues as he would be judged by success of the state. In contrast, private citizens had to display highest standards of behavior in public and private life.

However he recommended an absolute state only in certain circumstances and personally admired republican form of government as the best. Thus he preferred a strong and powerful state on case of making a new state or reforming a corrupt state. Once formed, he favoured a participative form of rule inspired by his admiration for the Roman Republic of the past. Republican government was ideal for stability and survival of the state. A despotic state based on use of brutal force is to be used cautiously as a medicine only for a diseased polity.

Thus it is clear that Machiavelli was not referring to an idea of constitutional state that emerged in modern Europe.  However, he can be understood as representing a transition in political institutions at the beginning of Modern period. He was able to grasp the evolution of state at its very early stage.  Further he himself was doubtful of possibility of finding a ruler with qualities as mentioned in The Prince.

V Conclusion

In spite of the criticism, Machiavelli remains unmatched in bringing out the pattern of changes that were taking place in his times. His ideas represented a decisive break from the medieval age and hence announced the rise of a new era of modernity in politics and society. His conclusions were drawn on scientific methods of study of political phenomenon. As Sabine observes, “he was perhaps too practical” to make a philosophical impact, but in among all his contemporaries, he stands out as the one with the clearest grasp of entire European tradition. Such ideas also laid the foundation for Realistic approach to International Politics. Thus his greatness lies in the field of the possible and the practical as against the ideal. His ideas represent intersection between the medieval and the modern.
Sources
1.       Mukherjee, S. and Ramaswamy S., ‘ A History of Political Thought’, 2012,PHI, New Delhi.
2.       Sabine, George and Thorson Thomas., ‘A History of Political Thought’, 1973, Oxford and IBH, New Delhi.


Friday 13 September 2013

Class Test Paper VI:
1) Definition and Scope of IR/ आंतरराष्ट्रीय संबंध: व्याख्या आणि व्याप्ती
2) Power/सत्ता  
3) Cold War/शीत युद्ध
4) North Atlantic Organisation (NATO)/उत्तर अटलांटिक करार संघटना
5) Warsaw Pact/ वॉरसा करार
6)  End of Cold War/शीत युद्धाची समाप्ती
              
4 
 Class Test Paper V:
1)      Machiavelli on Human nature / मॅकीवेलीच्या मते मानवी स्वभाव  
2)      Machiavelli on Powerful State/ मॅकीअवेलीनुसार शक्तिशाली राज्य
3)      Locke’s Social Contract/ लॉकचा सामाजिक करार  
4)      Locke on Limited State/ लॉकचा मर्यादित राज्यसंस्थेचा सिद्धांत

5)      Liberalism and John Locke/उदारमतवाद आणि जॉन लॉक