The Prince, and literature like it

I'm looking for books in the same vein as The Prince. I want to dominate the corporate ladder, or at least have a general understanding of how people gain power and keep it.

That book sounds boring as shit.

What's the best place to read a summary?

maybe machiavellis other book. I think its called "Discourses on Livy", never read it though

Oh, and also, "On War" by Carl von Clausewitz

My diary desu, but also The Art of War.

On war is specifically about military organization. It has very little general practical application.

who said OP isn't talking about dominating the corporate ladder of the US Armed Forces?

The military isn't a corporation. Please go read the 48 steps of power and off yourself.

>The military isn't a corporation.
Oh my sweet, sweet innocent child.
Should we tell him?

>What's the best place to read a summary?
"Be a dick, lie if you can get away with it"
-Niccolo "My Parents Didn't Hug Me" Machiavelli

kek

yes

The book is like 100 pages, don't be lazy.

> My Parents Didn't Hug Me

They did, when they needed something from him

Having read almost every political work of note in my Politics degree, Machiavelli is the guy I keep coming back to.

The Prince and Discourses are literally all you need. His work is hyper-condensed wisdom.

Realpolitik > Idealistic Drivel

Baltasar Gracian-The Art of Worldly Wisdom

Thanks, that's actually exactly what I'm looking for.

>I want to dominate the corporate ladder,
Why do you want to dominate the corporate ladder?

Seconding this. "The prince" is "Discourses" lite.

What do you mean that, Anonymous?

he means that "the prince" is a 'smaller' or 'more watered down' version of "Discourses on Livy"

this

underrated post

What's best edition of Discourses on Livy on the market right now?

My friend you must read instead siddhartha. I doubt you will ever be happy if you continue your foolish ways.

Machiavelli has his fair share of idealistic drivel, especially in his The Art of War which is 500 pages of steaming nonsense about how local militias fighting for muh civic virtue will defeat the professional armies of Spain who later went on to absolutely decimate said militias

48 laws of power

He makes similar arguments in the Prince.

His arguments were 99% sound, but he placed too much emphasis on motivation and not enough on numbers/resources. His basic thesis - that an army of citizens fighting for the love of their country/etc will be much more reliable than mercenaries, who fight for mere money - was pretty sound.

The Prince was a satire, and right now you're the butt of the joke. As someone else suggested, read Siddhartha.

>The Prince was a satire

Kys, my man.

Excellent retort, buddy

His arguments in the Prince are more aphorisms about the capriciousness of mercenaries rather than what you see in TAOW which is much more of a technical treatise - the thesis is straight up wrong imo. The thesis of TAOW isn't so much mercenaries but he is wary of standing, professional armies because he felt it was the downfall of the Romans, despite all the contemporary evidence suggesting standing pro armies were the future

don't get me wrong i love machiavelli but he fetishized the romans to the point of delusion, in contrast to his 'pragmatic' reputation

I haven't read his books but did Machiavelli every account for women entering the workforce/politics, since they by default have an advantage over men, or affirmative action/liberal agendas, that give minorities or SJW's the upper hand?

You have no context son. This nigger watched his home city while it was torn apart by warring factions, saw several of his republican friends executed or jailed, and was thrown in jail himself. He believed the impotence of Florences leaders allowed this to happen.

Yeah Machiavelli has a whole chapter about Gawker and SJW's

kek

Not an argument.

Arthashustra

>he still thinks he can read a book and translate that into success

the dominators are chosen from birth and breeding, if you're trying to get into the game you've already lost it bub.

Guicciardini, Botero, Frachetta e Ammirato.

Son. Niccolò Machiavelli was the Anita Sarkeesian of the 17th century. He was the bad guy.

Read Hobbes's Leviathan. Pretty much explains why humans are shit and need to be kept in check by absolute power.