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Transformações do significado de conflito na "História de Florença" de Maquiavel

The exam of the issue of conflict since the "History of Florence" provides us with elements capable to show the Machiavellian reflection does not evolve according to such a simple and linear way as it is shown in the "Discourses". In fact, investigation will reveal that the opposition between the two types of conflict - positive conflict and negative conflict -, described in the "Discourses", is progressively defined, from the analysis of Florentian history, as being just one type - the tragic and violent type -, based on contrapositions that cannot be solved in terms of a classical virtú, characteristic of the first period of Roman history. Such transformations arise a set of questions to which, in some way, the present paper intends to offer some answers: Would Machiavelli have renounced to the idea of conflict as foundation of republican liberty and surrended himself to the utopia of a homogeneous and stable order? Which element should be to blame due to the fact that disagreements did not produce, in Florence, the same effects which were seen in Rome? Would all disagreements be natural and, for that reason, inevitable, or could there be "artificial" divisions and, by that reason, avoidable ones?

Machiavelli; conflict; turmoil; republicanism; political freedom


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