EDITORâS NOTE
HOW MACHIAVELLI CAN HELP YOU EMBRACE THE IDIOSYNCRASIES OF YOUR SWING It was 1513 in the Florence, Italy and it was the worst of times for Niccolò Machiavelli. In a swift and malicious reversal of fortune, he was dismissed from his position as a high-ranking diplomat in the Florentine Republic then unjustly imprisoned and tortured for his alleged role in a failed conspiracy to assassinate Cardinal Giuliano deâMedici and overthrow and seize the government by force. Upon his release, things only got worse for Machiavelli. Not only had the republic he had faithfully served for fourteen years fallen under the rule of tyrants, he was now barred from government service (the only career he had ever known), banished from his beloved Florence (a city, he once confessed, that he âloved more than his own soulâ), and exiled to the Tuscan countryside with his wife and six young kids. Accustomed to matching wits with cardinals and dukes and other powerful rulers who swayed the destinies of Europe, his life now resembled that of a peasant and he found himself wasting his days engaging in petty quarrels with his neighbors, slumming in local taverns and bars, and playing drunken card games that âsparked a thousand squabbles and angry words.â But even as he wallowed in self-pity, Machiavelli began plotting his return to public life. Facing financial ruin, burning with unfulfilled ambition, and totally bored out of his gourd, he resolved to swallow his pride and write âa little primer on politicsâ in hopes of gaining favor among the Medicis and obtaining a new government job. And so it was that out of Machiavelliâs intense moment of crisis came The Prince, the most revolutionary if widely-maligned political tract of all time. Some five hundred years after he wrote The Prince, critics still condemn Machiavelli for his political realism, for advocating the preservation of power at all costs, and for being the founding father of modern power politics. His name itself is synonymous with mendacity and treachery. Yet regardless of where the cold, hard logic of his pragmatic realism may lead, most close readers of Machiavelli know that for five hundred years this guy has gotten a bad rap. For one thing, Machiavelli never wrote that infamous phrase, âthe ends justify the means.â What he wrote was: âIn considering the actions of men, one must consider the final result.â For another, at the height of the Italian Renaissance, when most of Europe was torn by war, Machiavelli claimed that he wasnât interested in talking about ideal republics or imaginary utopias, as many
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of his predecessors had done. âMany men have imagined republics and principalities that never really existed at all,â he writes, âyet the way men live is so far removed from the way they ought to live that anyone who abandons what is for what should be pursues his downfall rather than his preservation.â This tough-minded realism, as well as the casual, matter-of-fact way in which he presents it, is at the heart of Machiavelliâs political philosophy, and is also what has caused so much vitriol to spill from the lips of his critics. But the larger purpose of his realism is to simply warn men of the dangers of living as fuzzy-minded idealists. Instead, he urges men to live in the real world, where rulers like Cesare Borgia became great through their cunning and ruthless use of power. But letâs go back to Machiavelliâs infamous phrase, âthe ends justify the meansââwhich, as mentioned, was originally written as âin considering the actions of men, one must consider the final resultââand this is where golf comes in when considering the ends, the means, and âthe final resultâ of your swing! Consider Jim Furyk whose extraordinarily idiosyncratic swing is never-theless extraordinarily successful. âJim Furyk doesnât have a textbook golf swing, by any stretch of the imagination,âErik Matuszewski writes in his article, How Jim Furyk Shot A Record 58 With A Golf Swing Like An Octopus Falling Out Of A Tree. â[G]olf analyst David Feherty perfectly captured its essence by describing Furykâs swing as looking like âan octopus falling out of a tree.â No matter. Itâs all about the results.â Yes, it IS all about the results! And with 17 PGA Tour wins, including the 2003 U.S. Open title, Furyk is the first tour player to record multiple rounds in the 50âs and heâs done it with an unconventional swing that drives home the point: ânot everybody has to hit the ball the same way. Thereâs something to be said for trusting your swing, even if it does look like an octopus falling out of a tree.â And thereâs something to be said for coming in at #3 at the all-time PGA Tour money leaders with $75,000,000 and counting. Howâs THAT for âthe ends justifying the meansâ and embracing the idiosyncrasies of your swing? Ka-ching! Or as Arnold Palmer famously said, âSwing your swing.â And there you have it! On âthe Ends Justifying the Meansâ and How Machiavelli Can Help You Embrace the Idiosyncrasies of Your Swing!! Enjoy your walk, Suzy Evans, J.D., Ph.D.