Full Description
Building from the level of individual interaction, this book intends to shed light on what the author terms "infrasocial power" and the relation between this individual-actor oriented level and public power. In overviewing the origins of power, the author allows for the disaggregation of the social fabric, thus making it possible to: 1) isolate the "sequence" in which the phenomenon of superordination and subordination materialises; 2) identify the institutional "instruments" which can be used to limit infrasocial power; 3) discriminate between a social position achieved through engagement with others (and what we are capable of doing for them) from one occupied by means of force and deception; 4) explain the birth and function of public power; and 5) analyze the consequences produced by different political regimes.
Contents
1. Society and Power.- 2. The reshaping of man and the birth of totalitarian power.- 3. The conditions enabling individual choice and the limitation of power.- 4. Pareto and Machiavellianism: the problem and the errors.- 5. Voluntary cooperation and unlimited democracy.