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Power Notes All of the definitions of power that include notions of ability are based on a metaphor that social power is physical power, and fail to distinguish between acting on the physical world and acting strategically, failure to distinguish a situation where what you get is the direct result of the application of knowledge and execution to results, e.g., building a house, building an A-bomb, playing the piano; and a situation in which what you get is a result of not only what you do, but what someone else does in response, all human interaction, from conquering the world to playing chess. formal games: we must distinguish between knowing the rules well enough to play, and being able to take on all comers. Knowing how to play chess me is not at all like knowing how to play the piano, except at the most trivial level, that depressing a key makes a sound = moving a piece without violating a rule constitutes a move. Chess is always a game of strategy, while playing the piano never is, altho both can become resources in contests. even substituting probability for ability does not change the definition at all, it only acknowledges that performance is statistical. But having said this, all notion of causation is hidden: what has been a question of how is it possible to get one’s way in the world becomes a question of how often it is possible to get one’s way in the world. So once again, it is a matter of strategic relations: who gets their way more often. Without causation, we act as tho the future will be just like the past. And if social causation IS physical causation, the future will be exactly like the past. Yet physical causation is not probabilistic in the sense used here. That is merely our limited understanding being represented: if we assign X probability of an event occuring, it is either because we know the complete range of possibilities and deny cause (flipping a coin) or we simply use induction (B has happened pretty often, and I think that’s how often it always happens). In the face of resistance. Now it gets even harder to measure anything. In its pure form, we’re back to chess, total resistance, resistance at the limit of one’s ability at the formal level (barring for the moment issues of how we might know someone is “trying to let the other person win”). And recognizing the strategic component again, we generally abstain from the notion of power over the other person, or power to achieve victory, or the like. But as is so well known, even at the point at which physicality is foremost in the relationship, it cannot replace strategy where agency matters: if all you need to do is kill someone to achieve your goal, say to take their property as your own, then you do so and that’s it, just the physical contest. But if your goal depends on the other person doing anything at all, the physical metaphor breaks down. While breaking a neck and playing a piano are identical at this point – people do it more or less well – in most ways this is the least important point: the possible physical struggle leading up to the murder necessarily has features of a contest. Torture is not the whole answer, punishment is not the whole answer, and these are not technique or art, tho we extend these metaphors to into strategic relations. The final reality is that no one can determine another person’s behavior in the same sense or way we can determine the behavior of objects in the physical world. Power remains a post hoc explanatory device that bridges this gap with the metaphor that social causation is physical causation. We know it is not “absolutely true” but we hope or fear that it is “close enough.” Then we can follow Latour in his sense of how things that people want others to do, get done. The current versions of Weberian power in use are incompatible with current notions of agency. Changing the notion of “ability” to “probability” doesn’t change the issue, only the point of view, so that the more power one gets, the higher the probability: but in any event, we can only measure probability from past performance of strategic interactions; probability doesn’t turn strategic interaction into quantum mechanics. The difference between concepts of power and influence are critical. Power seems to deny agency, while influence retains it in usages that are not substitutes for probability of an outcome. Influence in this way is still an after the fact observation, and there may be many competing or reinforcing influences. But the influences are not determinate, they are stirred and applied within an agent’s mind. Iago was skillful in influencing Othello, but he did not have Othello in his power, and he did not make Othello murder Desdemona. At least the possibility of agency remains in some conceptions of influence, where it does not and cannot with power. On subjective component of Weberian definition: why does the notion that power triumphs over opposition/resistance matter at all? How is it power to get one’s way when it involves someone who resists = doesn’t want to see you get the result you are aiming at (vs. get your way?)? Is it not power when there is no opposition, no resistance? How can it be that the power you have not only depends on what the other does, but the attitude the other takes toward your initiative: not power if they too want what you do, power if they don’t; power if you get your way, not power if you don’t (= they have more power than you do, so do you have to do what they want?)