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Single Idea 23812

[filed under theme 24. Political Theory / C. Ruling a State / 1. Social Power ]

Full Idea

To define 'force' - it is that x that turns anybody who is subjected to it into a thing. Exercised to the limit, it turns man into a thing in the most literal sense: it makes a corpse out of him.

Gist of Idea

Force is what turns man into a thing, and ultimately into a corpse

Source

Simone Weil (The Iliad or the Poem of Force [1940], p.183)

Book Ref

Weil,Simone: 'An Anthology' [Penguin 1986], p.183


A Reaction

She celebrates The Iliad as the great examination of force in human affairs. I have felt that sense of reduction to a thing whenever anyone above me in the hierarchy has arbitrarily exerted their power over me.


The 23 ideas with the same theme [ways in which states control their citizens]:

Domination is probable obedience by some group of persons [Weber]
The essence of power is illusory prestige [Weil]
Force is what turns man into a thing, and ultimately into a corpse [Weil]
In oppressive societies the scope of actual control is extended by a religion of power [Weil]
People in power always try to increase their power [Weil]
The aim is not to eliminate power relations, but to reduce domination [Foucault]
Foucault can't accept that power is sometimes decent and benign [Foucault, by Scruton]
Marxists denounced power as class domination, but never analysed its mechanics [Foucault]
Power doesn't just repress, but entices us with pleasure, artefacts, knowledge and discourse [Foucault]
Hidden powers are the most effective [Lukes]
The pluralist view says that power is restrained by group rivalry [Lukes]
Power is a capacity, which may never need to be exercised [Lukes]
One-dimensionsal power is behaviour in observable conflicts of interests [Lukes]
Political organisation brings some conflicts to the fore, and suppresses others [Lukes]
The evidence for the exertion of power need not involve a grievance of the powerless [Lukes]
The two-dimensional view of power recognises the importance of controlling the agenda [Lukes]
Power can be exercised to determine a person's desires [Lukes]
Power is affecting a person in a way contrary to their interests [Lukes]
Power is the capacity of a social class to realise its interests [Lukes]
Supreme power is getting people to have thoughts and desires chosen by you [Lukes]
Power is meant to be confined to representatives, and subsequent delegation [Kekes]
Politics is driven by power cliques [Grayling]
There are eight different ways in which groups of people can be oppressed [Shorten, by PG]