Political Self

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The Political Self

Politics and Power


• "Man is by nature a political animal."
-- Aristotle
• "Politics, n. Strife of interests masquerading as a contest of
principles."
-- Ambrose Bierce, American journalist
• "Politics is the art of preventing people from taking part in
affairs which properly concern them."
-- Paul Valery, French writer and philosopher
• "The mistake a lot of politicians make is in forgetting they've
been appointed and thinking they've been anointed."
-- Claude D. Pepper, US Senator
• Some common definitions of politics:*
• Politics is the exercise of power
• Politics is the public allocation of values
• Politics is the resolution of conflict
• Politics is the competition among individuals, groups, or
states pursuing their interests

*Danziger, James N. Understanding the Political World. NY: Addison-Wesley, 1991


Politics is often understood as:
the art and science of GOVERNMENT, as affairs of
STATE
But:
The state is rooted in society.
The state maintains a particular social order.
Politics outside the state is important.
Interactions between state and society are at the core
of politics.
So, to understand politics, it has to be examined
as part of the entire fabric of SOCIAL RELATIONS –
cooperation and conflicts between individuals, groups,
classes
Cooperation and conflict are two basic modes of politics
POLITICS AS COOPERATION, OR INTEGRATION –
as the process of rule based on order and justice. Politics
is driven by the considerations of the common good.
More natural for the thinking of those who support the
existing social order (status quo)
POLITICS AS CONFLICT -
as struggle for power.
Politics is driven by selfish interests of individuals,
groups, businesses, states.
More natural for the thinking of those who would like to
change the status quo in their favour.
At any given moment, in any political process or event, one
can discover elements of both cooperation and conflict
which interact in various ways
Political analysis seeks to make sense of the logics of these
interactions
Many thinkers maintain that conflict and integration are
not two opposed faces but one and the same overall
process in which conflict naturally produces integration,
and divisions, by their development, tend naturally toward
their own suppression leading to the coming of the city of
harmony.”

The Idea of Politics, L.: Methuen, 1966, p.viii


THE LEAST CONTROVERSIAL WORKING DEFINITION OF POLITICS

A HUMAN ACTIVITY focused on:

1. the FORMULATION and EXECUTION of:


DECISIONS, which are BINDING on members of:
A SOCIAL WHOLE (family, community, society, the world)
– and:

2. the RELATIONS which are formed between individuals, groups, states


IN THE PROCESS of formulation and execution of those decisions.

See Larry Johnston’s Politics, Broadview Press, 1998, p. 16


The word politics comes from ancient Greece.
Its root is the word polis, which began to be
used about 2,800 years ago to denote a self-
governing city (city-state)

• POLIS – city-state
• POLITES – citizen
• POLITIKOS – politician
• POLITIKE – politics as the art of citizenship
and government
• POLITEIA – constitution, rules of politics
• POLITEUMA – political community, all those
residents who have full political rights
Four categories of residents of the ancient Greek polis
1. Citizens with full legal and political rights
• Adult free men born legitimately of citizen parents. They
had the right to vote, be elected into office, bear arms,
and the obligation to serve when at war.
2. Citizens with legal rights but no political rights:
• Women and underage children, whose political rights and
interests were represented by their adult male relatives
3. Foreigners (citizens of other city-states):
• Full legal rights, but no political rights. Could not vote,
could not be elected to office, could not bear arms and
could not serve in war. Subject to taxation.
4. Slaves
• Property of their owners, any privileges depend on the
owner’s will
Power

The fuel of politics.


The ability to make,
or to influence the making of,
those binding decisions which are the essence of politics
Struggle for power
Distribution of power: how fair? how equal? how effective?
Balance of power
Great power, superpower, hyperpower
A powerful leader
TYPES OF POWER
POLITICAL POWER
control of, or influence on, the state, ability to
make, or influence, political decisions
ECONOMIC POWER
control of economic assets
MILITARY POWER
ability to wage war - or to compel others
through intimidation or deterrence
These forms of power interact in many ways.
An important distinction:
“Power over…”
and “power to…”
“Power to” conveys the idea of one’s ability to realize
one’s goals without coercing others
Individually, by exercising one’s freedom
Or collectively, by joining with others in a free and
voluntary way
Associated with visions of a good society, based on the
ideals of freedom, equality, justice, solidarity, democracy
In real life, “power over” is the prevalent kind of power
Its main characteristics:
1. AN INTERACTIVE PROCESS
(you have to have someone to have power over)

2. POTENTIAL or ACTIVE
3. A PURPOSEFUL ACTIVITY
4. PROMOTIVE (Do it!) or PREVENTIVE (Don’t do it!)
5. BALANCED or UNBALANCED (“Absolute power corrupts
absolutely” – Lord Acton). Democracy associated with balanced
power
• INFLUENCE – use of power (or power exertion) with an
uncertain outcome
• CONTROL – use of power with a more or less certain
outcome
• DOMINATION – structured, stable use of power
5 principal forms of power (see OCDP, “power”)
1.FORCE – ability to detain and harm people and damage or
confiscate their property to compel them to obey your orders
2.PERSUASION – ability to convince people to do what they
otherwise would not have done by invoking their own
interests and common sense
3.AUTHORITY – legitimate (just and lawful) power to control
and direct people’s activities
4.COERCION – controlling people by means of threatening
use of force
5.MANIPULATION – controlling people without threats, by
persuading them about the legitimacy of the existing power
relationships, or by offering them benefits
LEGITIMATE power
TYPES OF LEGITIMACY (Max Weber, Politics as a
Vocation)
TRADITIONAL – based on tradition, established
beliefs or values (example: rule of dynasties, power of
the church)
LEGAL-RATIONAL – based on formal
arrangements (rules, laws, constitutions). The main type
practiced in contemporary politics
CHARISMATIC*– based on the extraordinary
personal qualities of a leader, or on the influence of an
idea or a cause
*from ancient Greek word “charisma”, meaning “gift”
Information as a power resource
• “Knowledge is power” – Francis Bacon
• From the printing press to the Internet
• The Information Revolution
• The Information Age
• The new role of information in our lives – in our
economy, social relations, politics – as a result of rapid
development of ICT (information and communication
technologies) since the 1980s
• Access to information
• Management of information
• Control of information
• Controlling people through their minds
• Values, ideas, the daily information flow
• Religion, education, propaganda, mass media
• The power of discourse
• The information battleground: how controllable are
we?
• Can you fool all the people all the time?
SO, WHERE DOES POWER COME FROM,
ULTIMATELY?
Power is produced by social cooperation.
Ultimately, it is a collective product. We create
power by acting together.
The problem is that this product is usually
appropriated by the few and used at the expense
of, or downright against, the many.
15. Marriage extinguishes criminal liability of rape.
14. Adults ( 21 – 25-year-olds) still need advice from their parents before
getting married.
13. An election tie will have to be broken by drawing of lots.
12. You can still get jailed “for offending religious feelings.”
11. Widows must observe “301-day rule” before marrying again.
10. You cannot own a deadly “pana.”
9. Your family members and in-laws who commit theft, swindling, and
malicious mischief against you are not criminally liable.
8. Squatting is not a crime.
7. Metro Manila has a convoluted traffic scheme.
6. Our immigration laws are ridicuusly ancient.
5. Women get charged with adultery, men get charged with concubinage.
4. Annoying people can be charged for being merely annoying.
3. The State will do its darndest to get a couple to stay married.
2. We still dole out excessive penalties for libel.
1. You can “legally” kill people.

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