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152 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 44
How to Run a Country: An Ancient Guide for Modern Leaders by Marcus Tullius Cicero
A curated collection that reduces Cicero's complex political philosophy to digestible maxims while obscuring its historical contradictions.
Editorial Construction and Purpose: This volume, part of Princeton University Press's "Ancient Wisdom for Modern Readers" series, represents a deliberate exercise in anachronistic application—extracting Cicero's political writings from their specific historical context to serve contemporary American political discourse. Editor Philip Freeman organizes excerpts around ten modern political "lessons," creating an artificial coherence that Cicero himself never intended.
Problems:
The Anachronism Problem: Multiple reviewers recognize this collection's tendency toward "confirmation bias," where contemporary readers find their existing political beliefs validated by ancient authority. This represents precisely the kind of historical anachronism that serious scholarship seeks to avoid—projecting modern categories onto ancient thought without acknowledging the fundamental differences in political, social, and philosophical contexts.
Production Context: As part of a series designed for mass market appeal, this volume prioritizes commercial accessibility over scholarly rigor. The format encourages readers to treat ancient wisdom as immediately applicable to modern circumstances without engaging with the difficult work of historical translation and cultural interpretation.
Rating: ⭐⭐✩✩✩ out of 5 stars