Fabio Albergati is best known as an opponent of the French political philosopher
Jean Bodin. Albergati's
Dei Discorsi Politici (1602; 1603) is a detailed analysis of Bodin's
République (1576). Albergati considers the political community to be natural, and states his preference for
monarchy as the ‘best’ of the constitutions described by
Aristotle in his
Politics, because of its similarity to divine government. He elaborated the idea of a kinship, a participation in a similar 'unorthodoxy', between Jean Bodin and Niccolò Machiavelli and equated the philosophy of
raison d'état with
Machiavellianism. In his work
La republica regia (1627), a counter to Machiavelli's
Prince, Albergati prefers to reconfirm that, against reason and interest of state, the natural and moral reasons on which political government is based are still valid: Consequently, if one wants to talk of reason of state as an instrument of government utilized by all sovereigns, it must be strictly combined with that civil prudence which guarantees a solid link - already definitively argued by the doctrine of Aristotle - of honesty to usefulness, of virtue to civil commitment. Certainly, the reference to the Catholic faith is explicit, nevertheless - sustains Albergati - it is natural reason which must guide the work of the governors and the governed; this is the main aim of his work: «the reasons of the modern politician, turned down not on the grounds of faith, but on the grounds of natural reason» (
La republica regia, p. 338). Furthermore, in the writing of Albergati, the difficulty of defining the point of equilibrium in the tension between morals and politics, can be found in those passages in which the author confirms the possibility of the prince's carrying out certain dissimilatory practices (
La republica regia, pp. 199 and 261). == Works ==