No Virtue Like Necessity: Realist Thought in International Relations Since MachiavelliYale University Press, 01/01/2002 - 260 من الصفحات A comprehensive history of the development of realist ideas in international relations throughout the last 500 years. Jonathan Haslam focuses on the emergence and relevance of realist (or statist) thought, showing how it has shaped political thinking and international events since Machiavelli's time. Haslam draws on an array of original texts in various European languages to illustrate the views of rulers and thinkers, to reveal how wars and other crises affected the thinking of those who experienced them, and to locate realist thinking squarely within the history of political and economic thought. |
المحتوى
REASONS OF STATE | 17 |
THE BALANCE OF POWER | 89 |
THE BALANCE OF TRADE | 128 |
GEOPOLITICS | 162 |
FROM REALPOLITIK TO NEOREALISM | 183 |
Conclusion THE RELEVANCE OF REALISM | 247 |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
affairs American appeared argued asserted assumption attack authority Balance of Power became become behaviour believed Britain British cause century claimed commerce concept concerned conduct continued critical danger determined economic effect emerged empire England entirely equally established Europe European existence fact followed force foreign policy France French further German give given greater hand Hobbes Hoffmann human Ibid ideas important individual industry interests international relations Italy later leading least less Letter liberal London Machiavelli manufactures matter means merely moral Morgenthau nations nature never noted original Paris peace political position practice present Prince principle protection published Quoted realist reason respect result sense social society term theory things thought tion took trade tradition true Tucker turn United universal Waltz whole writings wrote