일 | 월 | 화 | 수 | 목 | 금 | 토 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | |||||
3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 |
10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 |
17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 |
24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 |
31 |
- Samjae Capacity
- Task Delegates of the Ruler: Inner Circle
- political organization
- Mathematical Model of politics
- the 2nd law
- the 3rd Law of politics
- Cohesion Force
- Order of Choice
- new political science
- politics of Inner Circle
- political phenomena
- politics and war
- Differences in Individual Abilities and Tendencies
- Political Regimes
- Mathematical Model of political science
- power and organization
- Operation of the 2nd Law
- Samjae Capacities
- mechanism of politics
- survival process theory
- Canonical Politics
- Regime Change
- 1st Law of politics
- Power
- Political Change
- politics
- Political power
- Political Regime
- Orderliness of Choice
- Value Systems
- Today
- Total
목록2023/12/11 (48)
New Political Science
㉡ Economic Capacity Secondly, economic capacity refers to the amount of goods, in other words, property[Def. 1.2]. The more natural resources, commodities, real estate, and production facilities one possesses, the larger their economic capacity. Essentially, this is the ability to make people materially abundant in terms of consumption. The definition of economic capacity here considers only "go..
㉠ Armed Capacity First, armed capacity refers to the ability to perform war and physically coerce others by force, which is the ability (power) to impose one's will on others[Def. 1.1]. Basically, violence or force is the essence of armed capacity. Examples of such military capacities can be classified according to the three-level scale of political phenomena [Ch.2.15], as shown in the following..
b. What is Samjae Capacity? Samjae Capacity as a Means of Acquiring Power Is political capacity truly Samjae capacity? The classification and emphasis of political capacity as Samjae capacity can be found in various ancient Chinese classics. It is said that a Persian prince around 1080 AD once said: “The kingdom can be held by the army, and the army by gold; and gold is acquired through agricult..
(2) Explanation and Examples of the 1st Law a. Interdependence of Power Relations and Rule Systems ㉠ Interdependence of Power Relations The following is a formal explanation of the 1st law. The central concept of the 1st law is the size (relative) of power and political capacity, where political capacity refers to the three capacities of military, economic, and ideological capacities. First, let..
b. Formulation of the 1st Law (Though the content is somewhat repetitive) To put it more systematically and in detail, the 1st law means the following. [Ch.3.102] (Basicity) The basis of all political capacities is the Samjae capacities (armed capacity, economic capacity, and ideological capacity). ㉠ All types of political power are constituted by Samjae capacities (fundamentalicity), ㉡ and each..
㉡ Schematic Understanding of The 1st Law The temporal and spatial impact of Samjae capacities Let us refer to the power based on each Samjae capacity as "Samjae power". That is, just as K. E. Boulding suggests, military power is the power of the one who possesses armed capacity, economic power is the power of the one who possesses economic capacity, and ideological power is the power of the one ..
㉠ Detailed Contents of The 1st Law The 1st law has two main focuses. The first focus is on the political capacities, and the second is on the effects each of them creates and how they do so. Firstly, political capacity has three components: ㉠ armed capacity, ㉡ economic capacity, and ㉢ ideological capacity. These three components are referred to as "Samjae capacities." [Ch.1.2] Samjae capacities ..
Chapter 3. Three Laws of Political Phenomenon A. The 1st Law: Law of Samjae Capacity (1) Intuitive Explanation through Tables and Diagrams a. Basic Concept In political phenomena, political actors interact with each other based on the attributes of their political capacities to form a power structure (cooperative relationship) for their individual and collective interests[Ch.0.2]. The 1st law of..